Print Filuh 8 is a bold, normal width, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, packaging, social media, headlines, brand marks, energetic, expressive, casual, handmade, punchy, handmade feel, brush realism, display impact, informal voice, brushy, textured, slanted, rounded, wet-ink.
A brisk, brush-written print style with a consistent rightward slant and assertive stroke weight. Letterforms show tapered entries and exits, rounded turns, and occasional flicked terminals, creating a lively rhythm across words. The brush texture is visible in uneven edges and small ink breaks, while counters stay fairly open for a painted feel rather than a fully filled marker look. Spacing is slightly irregular and widths vary from glyph to glyph, reinforcing the hand-made character in both caps and lowercase.
Best suited for short, high-impact text such as posters, packaging callouts, social graphics, and event headlines where brush texture can read clearly. It can also work for logos or brand accents that want an energetic, hand-painted voice. For long passages or small UI sizes, the rough edges and dynamic rhythm are likely to feel busy compared to more restrained text faces.
The overall tone feels spontaneous and confident, like quick signage or a headline scrawled with a loaded brush. It reads friendly and informal, with a sense of motion that adds urgency and personality. The textured strokes and slant keep it from feeling polished or corporate, leaning instead toward expressive, human warmth.
The design appears intended to capture the immediacy of brush lettering in an unconnected, print-like structure—combining quick, gestural strokes with straightforward letter shapes for readable display. Its controlled consistency suggests a deliberate balance between expressive texture and dependable recognizability.
Capitals are compact and weighty, standing up well as display forms, while the lowercase maintains a fast, note-like cadence with simple, legible structures. Numerals carry the same brush dynamics and slight wobble, matching the alphabet for cohesive headlines. The texture and terminal flicks become more prominent at larger sizes, where the painted detail can be appreciated.