Print Tunuk 11 is a regular weight, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, book covers, game titles, theater promo, medieval, folkloric, spooky, playful, storybook, thematic display, old-world feel, handcrafted texture, dramatic tone, decorative impact, angular, chiseled, pointed, calligraphic, irregular.
A decorative, hand-drawn display face with sharp, wedge-like terminals and subtly flared strokes that suggest a brush or broad-pen influence. Letterforms are compact with slightly uneven widths and a lively, irregular rhythm, while counters remain fairly open for a bold silhouette. Curves are often pulled into hooked or tapered ends, and many joins feel carved or chiseled rather than mechanical, giving the alphabet a textured, organic consistency.
Best suited to short, high-impact settings where its distinctive, spiky brush forms can carry the message—titles, posters, packaging accents, and themed branding. It can also work well for fantasy or historical-flavored interfaces (e.g., game menus) and storybook-style headings, while long passages may feel visually busy at smaller sizes.
The overall tone is folkloric and medieval-leaning, with a hint of spooky theatrics—like signage for a tavern, fantasy map labels, or a storybook chapter heading. Its pointed endings and spirited irregularity create an animated, mischievous voice rather than a formal one.
The design appears intended to evoke handcrafted, old-world lettering with a dramatic edge, prioritizing personality and theme over neutrality. Its consistent use of tapered points and chiseled curves suggests a deliberate aim for a medieval/fantasy display texture that remains legible in bold, attention-grabbing lines.
Uppercase and lowercase share the same expressive, angular brush language, keeping the texture consistent across mixed-case settings. Numerals follow the same pointed-terminal motif, reading as decorative and characterful rather than utilitarian.