Distressed Efrot 6 is a bold, normal width, medium contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, album covers, horror titles, event flyers, streetwear, grunge, handmade, punk, horror, playful, diy impact, grunge texture, raw expression, edgy display, hand lettering, brushy, ragged, blotchy, textured, uneven.
A rough, hand-rendered display face with thick strokes and heavily irregular contours. Letterforms show brush/marker-like buildup and occasional interior voids, creating a blotchy, worn texture. Curves are lumpy and slightly angular in places, with inconsistent stroke endings that range from blunt to tapered or drippy. Spacing and sidebearings feel loosely controlled, giving the line a lively, imperfect rhythm and an intentionally unpolished silhouette.
Best suited to display sizes where the rough texture and uneven edges can be read clearly—posters, flyers, packaging callouts, album/playlist art, and game or film titling. It works well for short headlines, logos, and punchy phrases where a gritty handmade attitude is desired; for longer text, the heavy texture and irregular rhythm can reduce readability.
The overall tone is scrappy and rebellious, with a gritty DIY energy that reads as edgy and slightly menacing. Its distressed texture evokes zines, street posters, and horror-comic titling, while the rounded forms keep it playful rather than purely aggressive.
The design appears intended to mimic fast, expressive hand lettering with a deliberately worn print/ink effect, prioritizing personality and impact over refinement. Its irregular edges and blotchy counters suggest a distressed aesthetic aimed at attention-grabbing, theme-driven typography.
Uppercase shapes are generally compact and blocky, while lowercase forms appear simpler and more casual, increasing the hand-made contrast between cases. Numerals carry the same irregular fill and ragged edges, helping headings and short callouts feel consistent across letters and numbers.