Mummy Effazip Info
: Use a combination of elongated triangles and rectangles to simulate overlapping fabric. Start from different corners of each letter and extend the shapes slightly beyond the letter's original boundary to create a "bulky" look.
: Start with a chunky, bold font like Arial Black or Museo Sans 900 . You will lose fine details once you start "wrapping," so a thick base provides more surface area for the bandage effect. Mummy Effazip
If you don't want to draw it from scratch, you can find professional templates and fonts: : Use a combination of elongated triangles and
: Sites like Freepik host various vector styles of "mummy" fonts and bandages. You will lose fine details once you start
: Use a muddy green or dark tan linear gradient for the base of the letters.
: Apply a "Texturizer" effect (like Brick or Grain) at low opacity to give the bandages a linen or burlap feel. Ready-to-Use Resources
: Do not align the "bandage" lines perfectly. Varying the directions and letting some shapes fade into others prevents the text from looking too "boxy" or mechanical.