Print Emta 10 is a bold, narrow, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, album art, event promos, expressive, gritty, energetic, casual, handmade, handmade feel, expressive texture, display impact, casual emphasis, brushy, textured, dry-brush, rough-edged, compact.
An expressive, brush-drawn print with a consistent rightward slant and compact proportions. Strokes are thick and taper unevenly, with visible dry-brush texture, ragged edges, and occasional ink breaks that create a lively rhythm. Letterforms are simplified and slightly condensed, with tight internal counters and a generally upright baseline that still feels hand-set due to irregular stroke endings and small shape variations. Uppercase carries strong presence with narrow bowls and sharp terminals, while lowercase keeps a modest x-height and quick, punchy forms that read more like marker/brush lettering than formal calligraphy.
Best suited to short, high-impact text such as posters, display headlines, packaging callouts, album/cover art, and event or social graphics where texture is an asset. It can also work for pull quotes or section headers when you want an informal, hand-rendered emphasis; for longer passages, generous size and spacing will help maintain clarity.
The font conveys an assertive, handmade attitude—part street-poster, part sketchbook headline. Its rough texture and brisk slant add urgency and motion, giving text a candid, human voice rather than polished refinement. Overall it feels bold, gritty, and playful in a way that suits expressive messaging.
The design appears intended to emulate quick brush lettering with visible bristle texture and natural variation, prioritizing personality and immediacy over geometric precision. It’s built to deliver a strong, handcrafted display voice that feels spontaneous and energetic.
Texture is a defining feature: edges appear chipped and bristled, and stroke weight fluctuates within letters as if from pressure changes on a brush tip. Spacing feels naturally uneven, which reinforces the hand-drawn character; at smaller sizes the rough counters and dense strokes may benefit from extra tracking.