Print Pukob 15 is a very bold, normal width, medium contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, logos, packaging, album covers, energetic, expressive, playful, gritty, casual, impact, handmade feel, expressive texture, informal tone, attention capture, brushy, rough-edged, jagged, dynamic, hand-inked.
A heavy, brushy handwritten style with a consistent rightward slant and strongly irregular, ink-like contours. Strokes appear pressure-shaped with tapered terminals and occasional sharp spikes, giving counters and joins a cut, chiseled feel rather than smooth curves. Letterforms are compact but lively, with noticeable variation in stroke endings and internal whitespace that creates a hand-painted rhythm across words. The texture reads as dry-brush or marker-ink, with deliberate roughness along edges and a slightly uneven baseline/shoulder behavior that reinforces the drawn character.
This font is well suited to display roles where impact and personality are priorities: posters, headlines, social media graphics, event promotions, and bold packaging moments. It can also work for logo wordmarks or product names that want a hand-painted, punchy presence. For longer text, it’s most effective in short bursts—pull quotes, labels, or section headers—where the rough texture supports emphasis without tiring readability.
The overall tone is bold and high-energy, leaning toward edgy and playful rather than refined. Its rough brush texture suggests spontaneity and attitude, making it feel streetwise, poster-like, and attention-seeking. The slanted, punchy shapes add momentum and a sense of motion, suitable for expressive messaging.
The design appears intended to capture a fast, brush-drawn mark with strong presence and deliberate roughness, balancing legibility with expressive texture. Its slanted construction and variable stroke shapes suggest a focus on motion and attitude, aiming to look hand-rendered rather than mechanically uniform.
Uppercase and lowercase share a unified brush language, with simplified, gestural construction and prominent tapering at stroke ends. Numerals follow the same energetic treatment, maintaining the irregular edges and angled stress so mixed alphanumeric settings feel cohesive. The texture and tight apertures mean the face reads best when given breathing room (larger sizes or generous tracking) to keep counters from closing visually.