Print Firuh 1 is a bold, narrow, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, album covers, streetwear, event flyers, headlines, grunge, punk, handmade, raw, energetic, distressed look, handmade feel, edgy display, tactile texture, dry-brush, textured, rough-edged, scratchy, uneven.
A rough, dry-brush all-caps and lowercase with heavily textured edges and broken stroke contours that mimic ink drag on coarse paper. Strokes are thick and assertive with irregular terminals, occasional swelling, and small bite-like gaps that create a distressed silhouette. Forms are mostly upright and simple in construction, with slightly uneven baselines, inconsistent counters, and a hand-drawn rhythm that stays legible while avoiding geometric precision. Spacing reads fairly tight and compact, helping the alphabet feel punchy and poster-ready.
Best suited for display typography where texture and personality are desirable—posters, music and entertainment artwork, apparel graphics, packaging accents, and punchy headlines. It works well for short phrases, labels, and signage-style compositions where a gritty handmade look adds energy and edge.
The overall tone is gritty and rebellious, with a DIY, zine-like immediacy. Its distressed texture and uneven letterforms suggest urgency, attitude, and a deliberately imperfect human touch rather than refinement or polish.
The design appears intended to replicate fast, pressure-heavy brush lettering with intentional distress, creating an expressive, print-like hand-rendered voice. It prioritizes impact and character over smoothness, aiming for a bold, tactile presence that feels crafted and a bit unruly.
Texture is the defining feature: many strokes show internal speckling and ragged outlines, so large sizes emphasize the tactile brush character while small sizes may lose detail or darken. Numerals match the same distressed construction, keeping a cohesive voice across display copy and short callouts.