Distressed Honuk 11 is a regular weight, normal width, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, album art, packaging, headlines, social graphics, grunge, handmade, casual, edgy, playful, handwritten look, printed wear, diy texture, expressive display, rough, textured, brushy, worn, irregular.
A slanted, handwritten-style face with brush-pen construction and visibly rough, mottled edges. Strokes swell and taper subtly, with broken outlines and occasional ink-like gaps that create a worn print texture. Letterforms are loosely controlled and slightly variable in width, producing an uneven rhythm and a natural, sketchy baseline feel. Counters are generally open and rounded, terminals are blunt and organic, and the overall silhouette reads more like fast marker lettering than a drawn script.
Best suited to short-to-medium display settings where texture is an asset—posters, flyers, album/playlist artwork, product labels, and promotional headlines. It can also work for pull quotes or section headers when you want a handmade, distressed voice without leaning into highly ornate script forms.
The texture and jittery brush rhythm give it a gritty, DIY tone that feels informal and energetic. It suggests zine culture, hand-lettered posters, and distressed print ephemera, balancing approachability with a mildly rebellious edge.
The design appears intended to mimic quick brush lettering reproduced through imperfect printing or wear, prioritizing character and tactile texture over typographic precision. Its consistent slant and controlled letter skeletons aim to keep it legible while still delivering a deliberately rough, lived-in surface.
Caps are compact and upright in structure but consistently slanted, while lowercase forms stay simple and readable with minimal flourish. Numerals follow the same roughened treatment and casual proportions, reinforcing a unified, handcrafted texture across the set.