Print Yeliz 6 is a very light, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: greeting cards, children’s materials, packaging, social graphics, craft branding, friendly, casual, playful, approachable, whimsical, natural handwriting, everyday charm, friendly legibility, light texture, monoline, rounded, loopy, open forms, air-y.
A light, monoline handwritten print with rounded terminals and gently wobbly strokes that preserve the feel of a steady pen line. Letterforms are mostly unconnected and upright, with soft curves, open counters, and occasional looped construction in characters like g and y. Proportions are relaxed and slightly irregular, producing a natural rhythm; spacing reads even in text while retaining small variations in width and shape that signal hand-drawn origin. Numerals match the same thin, clean line and rounded geometry, staying legible without becoming rigid or mechanical.
Works well for short-to-medium text that benefits from a personable, handwritten touch—greeting cards, invitations, labels, and lifestyle or craft packaging. It also suits social posts, quotes, and educational or children-oriented materials where clarity is needed without losing a casual tone. The light stroke suggests use at comfortable sizes and in contexts where a delicate, friendly texture is desired.
The overall tone is warm and informal, with a playful, human presence that feels conversational rather than polished. Its lightness and rounded forms give it a gentle, cheerful voice suited to friendly messaging and everyday charm.
The design appears intended to capture neat, everyday handwriting in a clean printed form—prioritizing friendliness and legibility while preserving small natural inconsistencies that keep it feeling authentically hand-drawn.
The font maintains consistent stroke weight and a coherent alphabetic style, but keeps enough micro-variation in curves, joins, and terminal shapes to avoid a uniform “constructed” look. Capitals are simple and readable, and the lowercase has a slightly looser, more expressive rhythm that becomes especially apparent in longer text.