Print Yisa 6 is a bold, narrow, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, branding, packaging, social media, apparel, energetic, casual, expressive, handmade, sporty, brush mimicry, display impact, handmade tone, dynamic motion, brushy, dry-brush, textured, slanted, rounded.
An energetic, slanted brush-hand style with compact proportions and a lively, irregular rhythm. Strokes show visible brush texture and slight edge roughness, with tapered terminals and occasional swelling where pressure appears to change. Letterforms are mostly unconnected, mixing open counters and rounded bowls with quick, angular joins in diagonals; spacing is loose and organic rather than mechanically even. Capitals read as assertive and slightly condensed, while lowercase stays compact with simple, single-storey shapes and minimal ornament.
Works well for short display lines such as posters, product names, packaging callouts, and social media graphics where texture and energy are desirable. It also suits apparel graphics and casual branding that benefits from a hand-painted voice; for best clarity, use at medium-to-large sizes where the brush detail can breathe.
The font conveys a fast, confident, hand-painted feel—casual, sporty, and expressive. Its dry-brush texture and forward slant suggest motion and immediacy, giving headlines an informal, human tone rather than a polished corporate voice.
Likely designed to mimic quick brush lettering in a print-like, unconnected alphabet—prioritizing speed, texture, and personality over strict geometric consistency. The goal appears to be a versatile display hand that feels spontaneous and bold while staying legible in short phrases.
The texture is consistent across the set, creating a cohesive “marker/brush” impression, but stroke edges remain intentionally imperfect, which increases character at larger sizes. Numerals match the letterforms with the same brisk, painted construction and slightly uneven baseline behavior.