Print Silig 6 is a bold, normal width, low contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: kids branding, packaging, posters, headlines, stickers, playful, friendly, casual, childlike, whimsical, handmade feel, approachability, informal display, playful tone, rounded, bouncy, marker-like, hand-drawn, soft.
A chunky, hand-drawn print with rounded terminals and softly irregular contours. Strokes feel marker-like, staying largely monolinear while showing subtle wobble and organic width changes at joins and curves. Counters are generous and often slightly off-center, and overall spacing is lively rather than strictly uniform, giving the alphabet a buoyant rhythm. The forms favor simple geometry—round bowls, open curves, and compact proportions—creating strong presence and easy recognition at larger sizes.
Best suited for display use where personality is more important than typographic neutrality—children’s materials, playful packaging, event posters, stickers, and short headlines. It can also work for informal social graphics or product labels where a handmade feel helps soften the message and add approachability.
The font conveys an approachable, upbeat tone that feels conversational and lighthearted. Its imperfect, drawn-by-hand texture reads as warm and informal, suggesting spontaneity and a human touch rather than precision. The overall voice is friendly and a bit quirky, suited to messaging that aims to feel personal and fun.
The design appears intended to mimic a confident marker or brush-pen print, capturing the charm of handwritten signage while staying legible and consistent enough for repeated use. Its rounded construction and deliberate irregularities aim to add warmth, energy, and an unpolished human character to simple phrases and titles.
Uppercase and lowercase share a consistent soft, rounded construction, with a noticeably casual baseline behavior across words. Numerals match the same hand-inked personality, with simplified shapes and thick, friendly silhouettes that prioritize charm over strict typographic regularity.