Print Eblul 6 is a light, narrow, medium contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: children’s books, greeting cards, packaging, posters, craft labels, whimsical, storybook, playful, hand-drawn, quirky, hand-lettered charm, whimsical accent, friendly display, casual personality, curly terminals, loopy, bouncy, irregular, decorative.
A light, hand-drawn print style with slightly uneven strokes and subtly wobbly outlines that preserve a natural pen-and-ink feel. Letterforms are generally upright and narrow with variable widths, open counters, and a modest, short-looking lowercase proportion. Distinctive curled terminals and occasional spiral details appear on several capitals and numerals, adding ornament without turning the design into connected script. Spacing and rhythm are intentionally irregular, producing a lively texture in text while remaining legible at display and short-text sizes.
Well suited to children’s titles, greeting cards, party invitations, and playful packaging where a hand-drawn, decorative tone is desired. It also works for posters, craft branding, and short editorial pull-quotes that benefit from character and warmth. For longer passages, it’s best used at comfortable sizes where the organic irregularities read as intentional texture rather than noise.
The overall tone is playful and storybook-like, with a gentle eccentricity created by the curled ends and hand-rendered imperfections. It reads as friendly and slightly magical, suggesting a crafted, personal voice rather than a polished corporate one.
Likely designed to capture the charm of informal hand lettering while maintaining clear, printable letterforms. The curled terminals and occasional spiral accents appear intended to add personality and a whimsical signature to otherwise straightforward shapes, making the font feel illustrative and friendly.
Uppercase and lowercase share a consistent handmade logic, with rounded forms and soft corners throughout. The figures echo the same whimsical vocabulary, with looped or curled features that make them feel illustrative and characterful. In longer lines, the uneven stroke behavior and charming inconsistencies become part of the texture, giving text a casual, drawn-on-paper presence.