Print Venor 6 is a regular weight, very narrow, medium contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: greeting cards, packaging, posters, craft branding, children's content, playful, quirky, friendly, handmade, casual, handmade warmth, casual readability, compact headlines, friendly labeling, monoline, tall, whimsical, bouncy, clean.
A tall, lightly irregular print hand with mostly monoline strokes and subtly tapered terminals. Letterforms are narrow and vertically oriented, with a lively baseline and small, understated serifs or hooks appearing on some strokes. Counters are compact and round-leaning, while stems stay straight with occasional wobble that reinforces the hand-drawn construction. Spacing and widths vary slightly from glyph to glyph, keeping the texture uneven in a natural way and giving the numerals the same slender, drawn rhythm.
This style works well for short-to-medium text where a friendly, handmade feel is desired: greetings, invitations, packaging callouts, café menus, and poster headlines. It can also suit educational or kids-oriented materials, especially where narrow lettering helps fit longer phrases into tight spaces. For best results, give it comfortable tracking and use it at display or subhead sizes where the subtle irregularities can be appreciated.
The font feels cheerful and personable, like neat handwriting used for headings and labels. Its narrow, upright stance reads tidy at a glance, while the small quirks in curves and terminals add warmth and humor. Overall it conveys an approachable, crafty tone rather than a formal or corporate voice.
The design appears intended to mimic careful, legible marker or pen printing while preserving the spontaneity of hand-drawn strokes. Its narrow, vertical proportions and restrained contrast aim to keep it readable in phrases, with just enough idiosyncrasy to feel informal and human.
Capitals tend to be tall and simple with minimal ornament, while lowercase introduces more personality through varied entry/exit strokes and occasional looped or hooked forms. The dot on i/j is small and round, and punctuation in the sample text sits lightly, supporting a conversational reading color.