Print Vebon 6 is a regular weight, very narrow, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, packaging, posters, greeting cards, social graphics, playful, casual, friendly, quirky, handmade, approachability, handmade tone, casual branding, informal display, monoline, rounded, bouncy, tall, loose.
A tall, slim handwritten print with monoline strokes and gently rounded terminals. Letterforms show a loose, organic rhythm with slight wobble and hand-drawn irregularities that keep repetition from feeling mechanical. Many glyphs are built from narrow vertical stems with small hooks, soft curves, and occasional tapered joins, giving the set a lively, sketched texture. Spacing feels open and airy, with compact counters and a generally vertical stance that keeps text lines clean despite the informal construction.
Best suited to short-to-medium text where personality is more important than strict uniformity, such as headlines, captions, product labels, and playful packaging. It can work well in posters and social graphics where a handmade, friendly tone is desired, and it holds up clearly at display sizes where its subtle irregularities become part of the character.
The font conveys an easygoing, upbeat personality—like quick marker lettering used for notes, labels, or casual headlines. Its uneven, human cadence and slightly quirky proportions add charm and approachability, reading as friendly rather than formal. The overall tone is light and conversational, with a subtle whimsy that helps it stand out without becoming overly decorative.
This design appears intended to emulate fast, legible hand lettering—informal printed characters with a narrow footprint and an intentionally human stroke rhythm. The goal seems to be adding warmth and approachability to modern layouts while remaining readable and straightforward in everyday branding and display contexts.
Ascenders and descenders are prominent, contributing to a tall silhouette in both uppercase and lowercase. Dots and small details (like the i/j dots and short crossbars) appear intentionally simple and understated, reinforcing the quick handwritten feel. Numerals follow the same narrow, hand-drawn logic, staying consistent with the alphabet’s stroke and vertical emphasis.