Print Egror 6 is a bold, narrow, medium contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, branding, packaging, merchandise, gritty, expressive, urgent, streetwise, vintage, hand-painted feel, high impact, human texture, display emphasis, informal tone, brushy, rugged, angular, inked, textured.
A slanted, brush-driven print face with compact proportions and punchy, irregular strokes. Letterforms show strong hand pressure changes, with tapered entries and exits, occasional wedge-like terminals, and uneven edges that read as ink drag or dry-brush texture. Curves are slightly squared off and angular in places, and counters can be tight, creating a dense silhouette. The overall rhythm is lively and inconsistent in a controlled way, with noticeable variation in stroke width and character width from glyph to glyph.
Best suited to short, high-impact settings like posters, event titles, logos, labels, and apparel graphics where the textured brushwork can be appreciated. It performs well for expressive display copy and punchy taglines, and is less ideal for long passages or small UI text where the rugged edges and narrow forms can compete with readability.
The font conveys a raw, energetic tone—part poster brush script, part hand-painted signage. Its rough edges and forward lean feel fast and assertive, giving text a rebellious, handmade immediacy rather than a polished typographic voice.
The design appears intended to mimic quick, confident brush lettering with visible ink character, delivering a bold handmade look that feels spontaneous and human. Its compact, slanted forms prioritize momentum and attitude, aiming for attention-grabbing display typography with a gritty, hand-rendered finish.
Uppercase and lowercase share a similar brush construction, with lowercase remaining fairly upright in structure while still following the overall slant. Numerals match the same textured, cut-brush character, with bold shapes and occasional sharp corners that keep the set cohesive. At smaller sizes the texture and tight counters may reduce clarity, while larger settings emphasize the handcrafted stroke detail.