Print Pumut 6 is a bold, narrow, high contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, packaging, headlines, branding, book covers, expressive, rustic, lively, crafty, playful, handmade feel, display impact, casual voice, artisan texture, brushy, inked, organic, bouncy, textured.
A bold, ink-brush handwritten print with energetic, slightly right-leaning letterforms and visibly hand-drawn stroke edges. Strokes show pronounced thick-to-thin modulation with occasional tapering terminals, creating a lively rhythm and uneven texture that feels intentionally imperfect. Proportions are compact with a relatively low x-height and variable character widths; counters are often small and somewhat irregular, especially in rounded forms. The overall spacing reads tight and punchy, with simplified joins and minimal connective behavior typical of informal printed handwriting.
This font is well suited to display settings where personality matters more than neutrality: posters, packaging, branding marks, book covers, menus, and social media graphics. It performs best at medium to large sizes where the textured stroke edges and contrast can read clearly, and where the tight, compact shapes contribute to a punchy headline voice.
The tone is spirited and human, like quick marker or brush lettering on a poster or product label. Its irregularity and weight give it a friendly, artisanal personality rather than a polished corporate voice, with a slightly dramatic edge from the strong contrast and slanted motion.
The design appears intended to emulate expressive brush or marker lettering in a non-connecting print style, prioritizing spontaneity, texture, and visual impact. Its compact proportions and strong modulation suggest it was drawn to stand out in short phrases and titling while keeping an unmistakably handmade character.
Uppercase forms are sturdy and graphic, while lowercase adds more bounce and variation, producing a mixed-case texture that feels conversational. Numerals share the same brush-driven modulation and asymmetry, helping headlines and short callouts keep a consistent handmade flavor.