Print Fumav 8 is a very bold, wide, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Boulder' by Umka Type (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: posters, headlines, halloween, kids, packaging, playful, spooky, grunge, cartoonish, handmade, add texture, inject humor, create theme, stand out, rough-edged, chunky, irregular, torn, inked.
A heavy, chunky display face with rounded, simplified letterforms and consistently rough, torn-looking edges. Strokes are thick and mostly monolinear, with bumpy contours and small nicks that create an organic silhouette. Counters are generally small and compact, and the rhythm is lively due to uneven terminals and slight shape irregularities, while overall alignment remains steady enough for set text at larger sizes.
Best suited to display settings such as posters, event promos, Halloween or party graphics, stickers, and playful packaging. It also works for short quotes, titles, and social media graphics where a bold, textured voice is desired; it is less appropriate for long passages or small-size UI text where the rough edges may fill in.
The texture and rugged outlines give the font a mischievous, slightly spooky tone—like cut paper, distressed ink, or monster-movie title lettering. It reads as fun and informal rather than aggressive, leaning toward comic and seasonal moods.
The design appears intended to combine a friendly, rounded block structure with a deliberately distressed perimeter, creating an informal hand-drawn print style that feels energetic and characterful. The consistent edge treatment suggests the goal is a recognizable, themed texture while maintaining legible, uncomplicated shapes.
Uppercase and lowercase share the same blunt, rounded construction, with the lowercase maintaining clear, simple forms for quick recognition. Numerals match the same distressed edge treatment, keeping a unified voice across alphanumerics. The rough perimeter detail is prominent, so spacing and readability improve when used with generous tracking and at headline sizes.