Distressed Fuluz 6 is a bold, narrow, high contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, album covers, streetwear, sports promo, energetic, raw, urban, expressive, gritty, handmade impact, brush texture, grunge edge, motion feel, brushy, ragged, hand-drawn, jagged, dynamic.
A slanted, brush-drawn letterform with thick, fast strokes and pronounced tapering into sharp points. Edges are intentionally ragged with visible stroke breakup and occasional dry-brush texture, creating irregular contours and a distressed rhythm. Forms are mostly monoline in feel but vary by pressure, producing strong contrast between swollen stems and thin, flicked terminals; counters are compact and often partially pinched. Spacing is lively and uneven in a natural handwritten way, with a slightly condensed footprint and a consistent forward momentum across uppercase, lowercase, and numerals.
Best used at display sizes where the brush texture and torn edges can be appreciated—posters, event flyers, album/playlist artwork, streetwear branding, and energetic campaign headlines. It also works well for short logos, packaging callouts, and social graphics that benefit from a handmade, distressed punch.
The font conveys a bold, streetwise attitude—expressive, spontaneous, and a bit aggressive in its brush energy. Its roughened texture reads as handmade and imperfect, giving it a gritty, human immediacy suited to punchy, high-impact messaging.
Likely designed to emulate quick brush lettering with deliberate wear and ink breakup, prioritizing impact and personality over refinement. The goal appears to be a dynamic, imperfect texture that adds urgency and attitude to display typography.
Uppercase and lowercase share a coherent brush script sensibility while remaining mostly unconnected, making it read more like painted display lettering than formal calligraphy. Numerals follow the same energetic stroke behavior, maintaining the rough, inked texture and angled stance in mixed settings.