Print Ulkez 6 is a regular weight, narrow, medium contrast, italic, very short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, packaging, social media, greeting cards, casual, friendly, playful, youthful, chatty, hand-lettered feel, approachability, informality, expressive caps, display use, monoline, rounded, loopy, quirky, bouncy.
A lively handwritten print with a slightly right-leaning, marker-like stroke and gently rounded terminals. Letterforms are narrow and tall with elastic spacing and irregular widths that mimic quick, confident pen movement. Strokes stay mostly even, with subtle swelling at curves and occasional tapered entry/exit points, producing a smooth, monoline feel. The caps are large and expressive—often built from single flowing gestures—while the lowercase sits much smaller, with compact counters and simplified joins that keep the texture light and informal.
This font works best where a warm, informal voice is needed—short headlines, posters, packaging callouts, social media graphics, invitations, and greeting-card style messaging. It holds up well at display sizes where the expressive caps and handwritten rhythm can read clearly, while extended small text may feel busy due to the compact lowercase and lively spacing.
The overall tone is personable and upbeat, like casual note-taking or a friendly headline written by hand. Its bouncy rhythm and loopy caps give it an approachable, slightly quirky energy that feels conversational rather than formal.
Designed to capture the immediacy of quick hand lettering, prioritizing personality and motion over strict typographic regularity. The exaggerated caps and compact lowercase suggest an intention to create engaging, casual display typography that feels personal and human-made.
Uppercase and lowercase have a pronounced size contrast, which makes mixed-case settings feel animated and headline-driven. The figures are similarly hand-drawn, with rounded shapes and soft corners that match the letterforms. Consistency is intentionally relaxed: small variations in stroke direction and curvature contribute to a natural, human cadence.