Print Hemiy 14 is a bold, narrow, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, logotypes, halloween, book covers, playful, whimsical, storybook, spooky, retro, handcrafted feel, decorative impact, themed display, vintage flavor, blackletter-ish, chiseled, angular, flared, quirky.
A compact, heavy display face with hand-drawn irregularity and a distinctly chiseled silhouette. Strokes are bold with modest contrast, and terminals frequently flare into wedge-like points that create a carved, knife-cut impression. Curves are tightened and slightly lopsided in places, giving the letters a lively rhythm, while counters stay relatively small and the overall color is dark and dense. Uppercase forms lean toward angular, blackletter-adjacent shapes, and the lowercase keeps the same sharp, notched energy with uneven stems and occasional hooked details.
Works best for short, attention-grabbing text such as posters, event promos, packaging titles, and logo wordmarks where its carved, storybook personality can lead. It also fits themed applications—fantasy, medieval, magic, or spooky seasonal graphics—especially when set large for maximum shape recognition. For longer passages, it’s better as a display accent paired with a simpler companion face.
The font conveys a mischievous, theatrical tone—equal parts medieval and comic. Its sharp wedges and gothic-tinged construction suggest fantasy, folklore, and spooky signage, while the hand-rendered wobble keeps it friendly rather than severe. The overall feel is animated and characterful, suited to expressive headlines over neutral text.
The design appears intended to mimic informal hand-cut or hand-brushed lettering with gothic/blackletter cues, prioritizing personality and texture over strict typographic regularity. Its wedge terminals and uneven stroke behavior aim to create a dramatic, illustrative presence that reads as crafted rather than mechanical.
Spacing and widths appear intentionally varied, reinforcing a handmade cadence in running text. The numerals follow the same wedge-terminal logic, reading bold and decorative rather than strictly utilitarian. At smaller sizes the tight counters and dense weight may reduce clarity, so it benefits from generous sizing and simpler backgrounds.