Print Ilsu 6 is a regular weight, normal width, high contrast, reverse italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, titles, packaging, book covers, game ui, hand-drawn, expressive, energetic, rustic, dramatic, handmade feel, display impact, thematic tone, expressive texture, fast lettering, brushy, angular, rough-edged, spiky, irregular.
This font has a hand-drawn, brush-pen look with sharp wedge terminals, tapered strokes, and visibly uneven edges. Letterforms lean backward overall, with lively, irregular rhythm and varied character widths that create a jagged texture across lines. Strokes show pronounced thick–thin swings and quick directional changes, producing pointed joins and occasional hook-like ends. Counters tend to be small and angular, and spacing feels organic rather than mechanically even, which reinforces the drawn, gestural construction.
Best suited to short-to-medium display copy where personality is the priority, such as poster headlines, book or album titles, packaging, and thematic branding. It can also work for in-world or atmospheric text in games and entertainment graphics. For long body text, it’s most effective at larger sizes with generous line spacing to keep the lively stroke endings from crowding.
The tone is bold and dramatic, with a raw, handmade confidence that reads as adventurous and slightly wild. Its backward slant and spiky terminals add tension and momentum, giving text an edgy, mythic or folkloric flavor rather than a polite everyday feel. Overall it suggests expressive lettering made quickly and decisively.
The design appears intended to capture the immediacy of hand-lettered brush writing while emphasizing sharp, angular terminals and dramatic contrast. It aims for a distinctive, characterful texture that stands out quickly and conveys an informal, handcrafted feel with a slightly intense edge.
In the sample text, the texture becomes more pronounced in longer passages: word shapes remain recognizable, but the irregular spacing and high-contrast strokes create a busy, animated color. Uppercase forms are especially attention-grabbing and work well as display elements, while lowercase maintains the same gestural energy with less uniformity in width and stroke finish.