Print Eklak 4 is a bold, wide, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, titles, album art, game ui, packaging, rugged, folkloric, mischievous, primitive, handmade, expressiveness, texture, thematic display, handmade feel, chiseled, angular, jagged, inked, spiky.
A rough, hand-drawn display face with chunky strokes, sharp wedge-like terminals, and irregular contours that feel cut or brushed rather than precisely constructed. The letterforms lean heavily on angular geometry—triangular notches, diamond-shaped counters, and pointed joins—while maintaining an overall upright stance. Widths vary noticeably from glyph to glyph, creating a lively rhythm, and spacing appears deliberately uneven to preserve a handmade texture. Numerals and capitals share the same carved, faceted construction, with simplified interior shapes and emphatic silhouettes that hold up at larger sizes.
Best suited for short, high-impact text such as posters, headlines, title cards, album/cover art, and expressive branding. It can work well in themed applications like fantasy, folk, Halloween, or handmade-product packaging where texture is a feature. For readability, it performs most confidently at display sizes rather than dense body copy.
The font reads as gritty and theatrical, with an archaic, folk-sign energy that suggests handmade markings and bold storytelling. Its pointed, jagged edges give it a slightly menacing or mischievous tone, suitable for playful-dark themes without becoming fully ornate or formal. Overall it conveys a raw, tactile personality—imperfect in a purposeful, expressive way.
The design appears intended to capture a deliberately rough, hand-rendered look with angular, carved-feeling forms and strong silhouettes. Its primary goal is character and atmosphere over neutrality, using irregular outlines and pointed terminals to create a distinctive, energetic voice for display typography.
Counters often resolve into small diamonds or triangular openings, and many strokes end in knife-like points, which increases visual bite. The texture is consistent across uppercase, lowercase, and figures, but the intentional irregularity means long passages feel animated and busy rather than quiet or neutral.