Print Tuluz 9 is a bold, narrow, high contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, book covers, game titles, packaging, event flyers, medieval, gothic, dramatic, mystical, hand-inked, fantasy tone, historic flair, dramatic titling, hand-ink effect, blackletter, calligraphic, angular, spiky, flared strokes.
This font uses angular, calligraphy-driven letterforms with sharp wedge terminals and pronounced thick–thin modulation. Strokes feel brush- or pen-made, with tapered entries, occasional hooked endings, and a slightly restless baseline rhythm that reinforces a hand-rendered look. Counters tend to be tight and forms are compact, while diagonals and inner notches create a faceted, chiseled silhouette. Uppercase letters are more ornate and irregular, while lowercase is simplified but keeps the same pointed terminals and brisk, forward-leaning motion.
Best suited for display typography such as fantasy or historical titles, game and film posters, chapter headers, and branding elements that want a gothic or arcane feel. It also works well on labels and packaging where a hand-inked, old-world voice is desired, especially when set in short phrases rather than dense body text.
The overall tone is medieval and theatrical, evoking blackletter signage and fantasy titling. Its sharp edges and inky contrast give it an intense, ceremonial presence that reads as mystical, ominous, and story-driven rather than casual or modern.
The design appears intended to deliver a hand-drawn blackletter-inspired voice with strong contrast and dramatic terminals, prioritizing character and atmosphere over neutrality. Its irregular, calligraphic construction suggests an aim to mimic expressive penwork while staying legible enough for bold, attention-first headlines.
The numerals and capitals have strong personality and varied construction, making the texture lively and attention-grabbing. At smaller sizes the tight counters and intricate joins can visually fill in, so it benefits from generous sizing and spacing in display settings.