Print Ibrop 6 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, book covers, game ui, album art, medieval, occult, rugged, handmade, quirky, gothic mood, handcrafted texture, fantasy theme, dramatic display, angular, spiky, inked, uneven, sharp.
This font has a hand-drawn, blackletter-leaning print style with angular strokes and irregular, inked edges. Letterforms are built from narrow verticals and kinked joins, with frequent wedge-like terminals and small spur details that create a chiseled, notched silhouette. Stroke weight stays fairly even overall, while the outlines show deliberate wobble and occasional blunt flattening, giving each glyph a rough-hewn texture. Proportions vary slightly from character to character, and spacing feels loosely tuned, reinforcing an expressive, handmade rhythm rather than a rigid typographic grid.
It works best at display sizes where the jagged contours and medieval detailing can be appreciated—such as posters, chapter titles, book covers, and branding for fantasy- or horror-leaning projects. It can also suit game UI elements, stream overlays, or themed packaging where a handcrafted gothic mood is desired.
The overall tone is dark and archaic, evoking gothic signage, spellbook titles, and fantasy ephemera. Its scratchy, spurred contours read as mischievous and gritty rather than refined, making it feel dramatic, slightly sinister, and playfully ominous.
The design appears intended to mimic hand-rendered gothic lettering with a rough, inked finish—prioritizing atmosphere and character over strict uniformity. Its consistent angular vocabulary and intentionally uneven edges suggest a goal of creating an expressive, medieval-tinged display face for thematic, storytelling-driven uses.
Distinctive wedge terminals and small hooked protrusions recur across caps and lowercase, helping maintain cohesion despite the intentionally uneven outlines. The numerals share the same angular construction and rugged edge treatment, so mixed alphanumeric settings keep a consistent voice.