Print Eslo 12 is a bold, narrow, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, branding, packaging, headlines, social media, energetic, expressive, gritty, casual, handmade, handmade feel, high impact, casual voice, brush texture, display focus, brushy, dry-brush, textured, slanted, punchy.
A slanted, brush-drawn print style with compact proportions and lively, uneven stroke edges. Forms are built from quick, tapered strokes with visible texture, giving counters and terminals a slightly rugged, dry-brush finish. The rhythm is irregular in a controlled way—stroke widths swell and pinch, and letter shapes vary subtly to maintain a natural hand-rendered feel while staying legible in words.
Well-suited to short, attention-grabbing text such as posters, album or event graphics, brand marks, packaging callouts, and social media titles. It also works for editorial-style pull quotes or section headers where a hand-rendered, energetic voice is desired; avoid dense body text where the rough edges may reduce clarity.
The overall tone is energetic and informal, with a confident, streetwise edge created by the roughened brush texture. It feels spontaneous and human, more like hand-painted signage or marker-brush lettering than polished display type.
The design appears intended to capture the immediacy of brush lettering—fast strokes, tapered starts and finishes, and a deliberately imperfect outline—while remaining readable as an informal print face. Its compact, forward-leaning stance and textured strokes emphasize motion and impact for display-oriented typography.
Uppercase shapes read as bold headline-friendly gestures, while the lowercase retains a sketchy, handwritten cadence. Numerals are similarly brushy and slightly inconsistent, reinforcing the handmade character; the texture can fill in at small sizes, so the look is strongest when given some breathing room.