Print Udduv 11 is a bold, narrow, high contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, packaging, social media, energetic, expressive, gritty, streetwise, casual, handmade look, bold impact, expressive texture, casual voice, brushy, textured, dynamic, angular, organic.
A lively brush-lettered print with a forward slant and visibly textured strokes. Letterforms are built from quick, tapered marks with abrupt terminals, creating jagged edges and ink-drag artifacts that read as intentionally rough. Proportions are compact with tight counters and a slightly condensed feel, while stroke widths swing from thick swells to thin flicks, producing a punchy rhythm. The overall construction stays unconnected, but the gesture of each glyph suggests fast handwriting translated into a bold, poster-ready brush style.
Best suited to short, high-impact settings such as headlines, posters, album/cover art, branding accents, packaging callouts, and social graphics. It works well where a handmade, energetic voice is desired and where size allows the brush texture to remain legible.
The font conveys urgency and attitude—like a confident marker scrawl used for emphasis. Its rough texture and sharp, energetic motion feel informal and human, leaning toward edgy, modern messaging rather than refined calligraphy. The tone is assertive, playful, and a bit rebellious.
The design appears intended to emulate fast, confident brush or marker writing in a print-style alphabet, prioritizing gesture, contrast, and texture over typographic regularity. It aims to deliver a bold, human-made impression that feels immediate and expressive for display typography.
Texture and irregular edges become more noticeable at larger sizes, where the dry-brush character reads as a deliberate graphic feature. At smaller sizes, the tight apertures and busy stroke detail can reduce clarity, especially in dense text blocks.