Print Furis 4 is a very bold, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, horror titles, event flyers, album covers, spooky, grungy, rowdy, comic, punk, distressed display, hand-cut effect, high impact, thematic titles, diy texture, choppy, jagged, rough, angular, blotchy.
This typeface uses chunky, heavily filled strokes with irregular, chiseled edges and frequent nicks that make each contour feel torn or cut by hand. Forms are predominantly angular with occasional curved bowls, and counters tend to be small and uneven, boosting the solid, poster-like color. Terminals often end abruptly with wedge-like cuts, while joins and corners show intentional wobble and bite marks that create a lively, distressed rhythm. Overall spacing and silhouette vary from glyph to glyph, reinforcing an organic, hand-made texture rather than mechanical consistency.
Best suited to short, high-impact settings where texture and attitude are an asset: posters, headlines, title cards, event flyers, and cover art. It works especially well for horror, Halloween, punk/garage themes, or any design needing a gritty, hand-cut feel; for longer passages, the dense black shapes and rough edges are likely to feel heavy and busy.
The letterforms project a mischievous, spooky energy with a scrappy, DIY attitude. Its rough perimeter and dark mass read as dramatic and slightly sinister, like hand-cut signage or a stylized horror/comic title treatment. The texture feels loud and confrontational, leaning into chaos and grit rather than polish.
The design appears intended to mimic hand-drawn or hand-cut lettering with intentionally broken edges, prioritizing expressive texture and strong silhouette over refinement. Its goal is to deliver immediate impact and a thematic, distressed character for display typography.
Uppercase shapes lean toward compact, emblem-like silhouettes, while lowercase introduces more irregularity and quirky details, creating a deliberately uneven typographic voice. Numerals share the same hacked, distressed edges, maintaining a consistent visual grit across the set.