Print Filur 4 is a bold, narrow, high contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, branding, packaging, social media, energetic, gritty, casual, expressive, urban, handmade impact, energetic display, brush texture, informal tone, brushy, textured, jagged, slanted, dry-brush.
A lively brush-drawn print style with a pronounced rightward slant and visibly textured strokes. Letterforms are built from fast, tapered marks that shift between thick swells and thin, dry-brush edges, creating a rough, broken outline in places. Proportions are compact and condensed, with tight counters and a relatively low lowercase profile; joins are mostly unconnected, emphasizing a handwritten, marker/brush rhythm rather than continuous script. Numerals and capitals carry the same angular, gestural construction, with occasional flicked terminals and uneven stroke boundaries that reinforce the hand-made character.
Well-suited to short, high-impact text such as posters, album/cover art, event promos, sports or action-themed headlines, and bold brand moments where a handmade edge is desired. It can work effectively in packaging accents or social graphics when set large enough for the brush texture and tight counters to remain clear.
The font conveys speed and attitude—confident, informal, and slightly aggressive in a street-poster way. Its scratchy brush texture and dynamic slant give it a raw, kinetic feel that reads as energetic and contemporary rather than polished or traditional.
The design appears intended to mimic quick, confident brush lettering with visible grain and pressure changes, prioritizing expressive impact over refinement. Its condensed, forward-leaning forms and textured stroke behavior suggest a goal of delivering energetic display typography with a distinctly hand-rendered feel.
Texture is a major part of the voice: edges appear frayed and ink density varies within strokes, suggesting dry media or a rough surface. Spacing feels intentionally tight and punchy, supporting compact headlines, while the consistent forward motion keeps lines of text feeling active and emphatic.