Solid Lehi 6 is a very bold, narrow, medium contrast, upright, tall x-height font visually similar to 'Mr Dum Dum' by Hipopotam Studio, 'Galpon Pro' by RodrigoTypo, and 'Bunlay' and 'Raintage' by ahweproject (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, stickers, merchandise, playful, chunky, retro, quirky, cartoonish, attention grabbing, graphic impact, playful display, novelty branding, rounded, blobby, soft corners, irregular, heavyweight.
A dense, display-oriented solid with swollen, rounded silhouettes and small wedge-like notches that create a chiseled-but-soft edge throughout. The letters are highly compact and top-heavy in feel, with uneven internal shaping that suggests hand-carved or cutout forms rather than geometric construction. Counters are largely collapsed, so bowls read as solid masses with only occasional cut-ins; terminals are blunt and often slightly angled, producing a lively, irregular rhythm in words. Overall spacing appears tight and the texture is dark, with strong silhouette recognition carrying the design more than interior detail.
Best suited for large headlines, posters, playful branding, packaging callouts, and short emphatic phrases where a heavy, graphic silhouette is desired. It can work well on merchandise or signage when set with generous size and careful spacing to preserve character separation.
The tone is bold and humorous, leaning toward a retro cartoon or novelty poster look. Its bouncy irregularities and near-stencil-like nicks add a mischievous, handmade energy that feels attention-seeking and informal.
The design appears intended to maximize visual impact through solid, rounded massing and distinctive notched contours, creating a recognizable, playful display voice that reads more like a graphic shape system than conventional text typography.
Because interior openings are minimized, characters differentiate mainly by outer contour and distinctive cut-ins (notably in forms like C, G, S, and some lowercase). In longer text lines the design becomes a continuous black band, so size and tracking will strongly affect legibility.