Print Ekruk 4 is a very bold, normal width, medium contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, music promos, sports branding, energetic, expressive, rugged, casual, loud, hand-painted feel, high impact, expressive texture, dynamic motion, brushy, textured, angular, dynamic, dry-brush.
A heavy, brush-driven italic print style with irregular, textured edges and visibly variable stroke thickness. Forms are compact yet punchy, with a forward slant and a lively baseline that feels slightly uneven in a natural way. Terminals are often tapered or bluntly cut, and counters tend to be small and irregular, contributing to a dense, ink-rich silhouette. Overall rhythm is quick and gestural, with letter shapes simplified for speed and impact rather than precision.
Best used where impact and personality matter most: posters, display headlines, social graphics, packaging callouts, and promotional materials. It works well for music, nightlife, streetwear, and sports-adjacent branding where a bold, hand-painted voice is desirable. For longer passages, it’s better as a short accent or subhead rather than continuous body text.
The font projects an energetic, streetwise tone—bold, informal, and a bit gritty. Its dry-brush texture and slanted motion suggest urgency and confidence, giving text a hand-made, poster-like attitude. The overall feel is expressive and spontaneous, suited to attention-grabbing messaging.
The design appears intended to capture the look of fast, confident brush lettering in a strong display weight, prioritizing motion, texture, and expressive punch. Its irregular edges and dynamic slant aim to deliver a hand-made feel that reads as bold and immediate in branding and headline contexts.
Uppercase and lowercase share a consistent brush logic, but with noticeable natural variation in stroke edges that creates a lively, imperfect texture. Numerals match the same painted construction and weight, keeping mixed text visually cohesive. At smaller sizes the rough edges and tight counters can reduce clarity, while larger settings emphasize the intended texture and movement.