Print Yida 4 is a bold, very narrow, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, branding, packaging, social media, energetic, casual, expressive, edgy, sporty, handmade feel, high impact, motion, texture focus, brushy, dry-brush, textured, angular, dynamic.
A slanted, brush-written face with compact proportions and a lively, uneven rhythm. Strokes show a dry-brush texture with occasional tapered starts and blunt, flicked terminals, creating crisp internal counters and slightly ragged edges. Letterforms are mostly unconnected and somewhat condensed, with simplified construction and sharp diagonals that keep the silhouette active. Capitals carry prominent gesture and variation, while lowercase stays compact with narrow bowls and quick, upright stems, maintaining a consistent hand-drawn momentum across text.
Best suited to short, attention-grabbing copy such as posters, headlines, cover art, labels, and social graphics where texture and motion are desirable. It can also work for branding accents and packaging callouts, especially when paired with a calmer companion text face for longer reading.
The overall tone feels fast, informal, and high-energy, like marker or brush lettering made in a single confident pass. Its roughened texture and assertive slant give it a punchy, contemporary attitude that can read as sporty or street-influenced without becoming chaotic.
The design appears intended to capture the immediacy of quick brush lettering—compact, slanted forms with visible stroke texture—delivering impact and personality for display applications while retaining enough consistency to set short phrases cleanly.
The stroke texture is a defining feature: heavier deposits appear at turns and joins, while thinner, drier passages show through on straights. Spacing feels intentionally irregular in a handwritten way, and the numerals follow the same brisk, gestural logic for cohesive display use.