Print Yomaf 1 is a bold, very narrow, high contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, branding, packaging, social media, energetic, expressive, casual, playful, urban, handmade feel, headline impact, casual voice, brush texture, quick lettering, brushy, textured, painterly, dynamic, hand-drawn.
A lively brush-pen style with slanted, fast-moving strokes and noticeable pressure changes that create thick-to-thin modulation. Terminals are often tapered or softly blunted, with occasional rough edges and ink drag that add texture. Letterforms lean and bounce on the baseline with slightly irregular widths and proportions, producing an organic rhythm; counters are compact and some joins feel intentionally spontaneous rather than geometric. The overall silhouette reads dark and gestural, with distinct stroke directionality and a consistent handwritten flow across caps, lowercase, and numerals.
Best suited for short, prominent text where its brush texture and energetic rhythm can be appreciated—posters, covers, signage-style headlines, and brand marks with a handmade voice. It also works well for packaging callouts, event promotions, and social media graphics where an expressive, informal tone is desired. For longer passages, it performs most comfortably in brief bursts such as quotes, labels, or section headers.
The tone is informal and energetic, like quick marker lettering used for attention-grabbing notes or headline callouts. Its brush texture and rhythmic slant convey spontaneity and personality, leaning more modern and street-adjacent than refined or classical. The effect is friendly and expressive, with a slightly gritty, handmade edge.
The design appears intended to emulate quick brush lettering with natural pressure shifts and visible stroke texture, prioritizing expressive impact over uniformity. Its narrow, slanted forms and lively baseline suggest a goal of fitting punchy wording into tight spaces while keeping a strong handwritten personality.
Caps are tall and assertive while the lowercase stays comparatively compact, giving mixed-case settings a pronounced top-heavy emphasis. The texture becomes more apparent at larger sizes, where bristle-like edges and stroke overlap add character; at smaller sizes, the dense strokes can read as bold gestures rather than crisp details. Numerals follow the same brush logic and maintain a consistent handwritten cadence alongside the letters.