Print Herez 6 is a bold, narrow, medium contrast, reverse italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, book covers, game titles, packaging, medieval, storybook, rustic, playful, handcrafted, thematic display, handcrafted tone, historic flavor, decorative impact, expressive headings, angular, chiseled, spiky, textured, irregular.
A compact, hand-drawn print face with a strong black presence and uneven, brush-like edges. Strokes taper into sharp terminals and wedge-like serifs, producing a subtly chiseled, calligraphic feel rather than smooth geometry. Letterforms lean slightly with a lively baseline and variable stroke rhythm, and widths vary noticeably from glyph to glyph, reinforcing an informal, hand-rendered texture. Counters are generally tight and shapes are angular, giving the alphabet a crisp, cut-paper silhouette at display sizes.
Best suited to display typography such as posters, chapter titles, covers, and branding that benefits from a handcrafted, medieval-leaning flavor. It works well for short phrases, logos, and themed packaging where its angular texture can be appreciated, and less well for long-form reading or very small sizes where tight counters and rough edges can reduce clarity.
The overall tone suggests medieval signage and fantasy storytelling, with an energetic, slightly mischievous personality. Its roughened edges and pointed terminals read as handcrafted and theatrical, more decorative than polite, and well-suited to expressive, character-driven typography.
The design appears intended to evoke hand-lettered, old-world character with a bold, carved-brush look and a spirited, informal rhythm. Its variable widths and sharp terminals prioritize personality and atmosphere over strict regularity, aiming for expressive titles and decorative text.
Uppercase forms are especially emblematic and spurred, while lowercase maintains a compact x-height with pronounced ascenders/descenders that add bounce and vertical variety. Numerals follow the same wedge-terminal logic, keeping the set stylistically cohesive. The texture and tight internal spaces make it feel strongest when given room and contrast rather than in dense, small-size settings.