Print Yakur 1 is a bold, very narrow, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, packaging, headlines, social ads, logos, brushy, casual, energetic, playful, handmade, handmade feel, signage look, high impact, friendly tone, texture emphasis, dry brush, textured, expressive, bouncy, irregular baseline.
A lively brush-drawn print face with quick, slightly right-leaning strokes and visibly textured edges. The letterforms are compact and tall, with uneven stroke terminals that taper, fray, and occasionally blob, creating a dry-brush rhythm. Curves are simplified and slightly angular in places, counters stay fairly open despite the heavy stroke, and widths vary notably from glyph to glyph for an organic, hand-rendered cadence. Numerals follow the same painted texture and informal proportions, with a generally narrow footprint and animated vertical movement.
Works best for short, attention-grabbing text where the brush texture can stay visible—posters, apparel graphics, album/cover art, casual branding, and punchy packaging callouts. It can also add personality to pull quotes or section headers, but is less suited to dense body copy where the rough edges and irregular rhythm may reduce clarity.
The overall tone is spontaneous and human, like fast marker or brush signage. Its roughened edges and uneven pressure convey energy and approachability, balancing friendliness with a slightly gritty, street-art edge.
The design appears intended to mimic quick brush lettering in a clean, unconnected print style, prioritizing expressive texture and momentum over strict uniformity. Its condensed, animated forms aim to deliver a bold handmade voice that feels immediate and informal.
Texture is a key part of the look: stroke edges show consistent abrasion and internal speckling that reads as bristle or dry ink. Spacing and alignment feel intentionally loose, with a bouncy baseline and irregular sidebearings that reinforce the handmade character.