Print Yarar 8 is a bold, narrow, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, branding, packaging, social media, energetic, casual, brushy, friendly, urban, handmade feel, quick emphasis, dynamic display, casual branding, brush texture, dry brush, textured, slanted, gestural, dynamic.
A lively brush-script print style with a pronounced rightward slant and visibly textured, dry-brush edges. Strokes show moderate contrast with tapered entries and exits, occasional blunt terminals, and slight wobble that keeps the rhythm human and gestural. Uppercase forms read like quick marker capitals with simplified bowls and open counters, while lowercase stays compact with a relatively small x-height and tall, fluid ascenders. Overall spacing is tight and uneven in an intentional way, with irregular stroke width and subtle ink breakup that adds grit without sacrificing legibility at display sizes.
Best suited to posters, short headlines, and punchy branding where the brush texture and slanted energy can carry the message. It also works well for packaging callouts, event promos, and social graphics that benefit from a casual, handcrafted emphasis. For longer copy, it’s most effective in short bursts or larger sizes where its textured edges remain clear.
The tone is informal and energetic, with a hand-painted immediacy that feels sporty and streetwise. Its roughened brush texture suggests motion and spontaneity, giving headlines a confident, expressive voice rather than a polished or delicate one.
The design appears intended to mimic fast, confident marker or brush lettering with a dry-brush texture, delivering an expressive, informal look that feels handmade and immediate. Its condensed proportions and forward slant aim to maximize impact and momentum in display typography.
Figures and punctuation follow the same brisk, brushed construction, keeping texture and slant consistent across the set. The texture becomes more apparent in larger settings, where the dry-brush grain and slight stroke fraying read as a deliberate stylistic feature.