Print Yebof 4 is a bold, very narrow, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, branding, packaging, apparel, energetic, handmade, casual, sporty, youthful, hand-lettered look, motion, impact, texture, brushy, expressive, textured, dry-brush, slanted.
A slanted, brush-script-inspired print with thick, pressure-driven strokes and visible texture that reads like a dry brush or marker. Letters are mostly unconnected but share a consistent rightward lean and a fast, calligraphic rhythm, with tapered terminals and occasional blunt stroke endings. Forms are condensed and angular in places, with simplified counters and compact proportions; lowercase shows a relatively small x-height compared to tall ascenders and prominent capitals. Numerals follow the same energetic stroke logic, keeping a hand-painted feel rather than geometric regularity.
Best suited to short, high-impact text such as posters, event titles, social graphics, packaging callouts, apparel graphics, and bold brand marks that benefit from an energetic brush look. It can also work for pull quotes or section headers where texture and motion are desirable, especially when given comfortable spacing.
The font conveys speed and confidence, with an informal, handcrafted tone that feels lively and slightly rugged. Its brushy texture and forward slant suggest motion and spontaneity, giving it an upbeat, contemporary attitude rather than a polished corporate voice.
The design appears intended to simulate quick hand lettering with a brush or chisel-tip marker, capturing pressure variation, textured edges, and a forward-leaning rhythm for expressive display use. Its condensed footprint and assertive strokes suggest it was drawn to stay punchy and legible in attention-grabbing, contemporary contexts.
Consistency comes more from stroke behavior (pressure, taper, and texture) than from strict geometric construction, so the texture becomes part of the personality at display sizes. The condensed shapes and strong diagonals create punchy word silhouettes, while some tighter apertures and heavy joins can build density when set small or tightly tracked.