Print Furih 5 is a very bold, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, stickers, event flyers, playful, grungy, handmade, rowdy, comic, expressiveness, diy texture, impact, informality, chunky, textured, ragged, irregular, blunt.
A chunky, heavy display face with irregular, hand-drawn outlines and a visibly rough edge treatment that reads like torn paper or dry-brush chatter. Strokes are broad and mostly monoline, with inconsistent terminals, occasional nicks, and uneven curves that create a lively texture across words. Counters are generally open but vary in size, and letterforms lean on simplified, blocky silhouettes with subtle wobble rather than precise geometry. The overall rhythm is bouncy and slightly unpredictable, with small width and shape variations between glyphs contributing to a handmade feel.
Best suited to short, high-impact text such as posters, headlines, logos, and product or entertainment packaging where texture and personality are an asset. It can also work for playful signage and social graphics, especially when set at moderate-to-large sizes to preserve the distressed detail.
The font conveys a loud, mischievous energy—more like a DIY poster or playful monster/comic lettering than a polished editorial face. Its roughened edges and bold mass feel expressive and attention-seeking, giving headlines a scrappy, street-level character.
The design intent appears to be an informal, hand-rendered display font that prioritizes personality and bold presence over smooth refinement. The rough contouring and uneven silhouettes suggest a deliberate DIY aesthetic aimed at energetic, characterful messaging.
In longer samples the dense black shapes create strong impact, while the distressed contouring adds visual noise that becomes more prominent at smaller sizes. Round letters (like O, C, G) stay fairly stout, while verticals (like I, l) keep a cut, chiseled look, reinforcing the rugged texture.