Print Umgos 6 is a regular weight, narrow, medium contrast, italic, very short x-height font.
Keywords: packaging, posters, social media, greeting cards, children’s content, casual, friendly, handmade, playful, approachable, handwritten feel, informal voice, human warmth, casual readability, monoline, upright slant, rounded, airy, bouncy.
A casual handwritten print with a lightly right-leaning slant and a predominantly monoline stroke that shows subtle pressure variation at joins and terminals. Letterforms are narrow and tall, with open counters, rounded shoulders, and frequent tapered or slightly flared ends that mimic quick marker or pen movement. Spacing is irregular in a natural way, and widths vary noticeably from glyph to glyph, giving lines a lively rhythm. Numerals are simple and legible, drawn with the same loose, hand-drawn consistency as the alphabet.
Works well for short to medium-length text where an informal, handwritten voice is desired—such as packaging callouts, posters, social graphics, invitations, greeting cards, and playful editorial pull quotes. It’s especially effective in headings, captions, and branded accents where a friendly, handmade impression helps soften the message.
The overall tone is informal and personable, with a quick, note-like energy that feels human rather than engineered. Its bouncy rhythm and slightly quirky shapes read as friendly and conversational, suitable for lighthearted or crafty messaging.
Designed to emulate quick, natural hand lettering with consistent stroke weight and a slightly italic, energetic stance. The goal appears to be an easygoing print style that remains readable while preserving the imperfections and rhythm of writing by hand.
Uppercase forms tend to be tall and relaxed, while lowercase shows very small bodies relative to ascenders/descenders, creating a high-contrast texture between capitals and lowercase in mixed-case text. Diacritics and punctuation in the sample maintain the same loose, hand-drawn character, supporting cohesive paragraph-level texture at display sizes.