Print Ebrut 1 is a regular weight, narrow, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, book covers, packaging, game titles, party invites, playful, hand-drawn, whimsical, spooky, storybook, handmade feel, textured display, quirky charm, themed branding, roughened, spurred, inked, quirky, decorative.
A hand-drawn print face with mostly monoline strokes and lightly irregular outlines that mimic ink drag and worn edges. Letterforms are upright and compact, with variable glyph widths and a generally tight, narrow footprint. Small spur-like terminals and occasional scratchy protrusions appear on ends and joins, giving strokes a slightly ragged, distressed finish while keeping counters open and readable. The lowercase is simple and rounded, while the uppercase introduces more angular gestures and occasional exaggerated curves, creating a lively rhythm across words.
Best suited to short headlines and display settings where the distressed, hand-inked details can be appreciated—posters, book or chapter titles, packaging, and themed event materials. It can also work for UI titles in games or apps that want a crafted, whimsical atmosphere, while extended body text may feel busy due to the built-in texture.
The overall tone feels playful and slightly eerie, like a doodled display face for imaginative titles. The roughened terminals and starry/speckled artifacts add a mischievous, magical flavor without pushing into heavy horror stylization. It reads as informal and characterful, suggesting handmade craft rather than polished neutrality.
The design appears intended to simulate informal hand lettering with a lightly distressed edge, combining straightforward print structures with decorative nicks and spurs for personality. It aims for friendly legibility first, then adds surface texture and quirky terminals to deliver a distinctive, story-driven voice.
The texture is baked into the glyph shapes, so at smaller sizes the speckled details can visually cluster, while at larger sizes the rough edge work becomes a prominent stylistic feature. Numerals follow the same hand-inked logic with simple, legible forms and occasional distressed nicks.