Print Edlur 6 is a regular weight, very narrow, low contrast, upright, very short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, kids, craft labels, playful, quirky, handmade, casual, whimsical, hand-lettered feel, compact display, approachable tone, casual readability, monoline, condensed, bouncy, textured, irregular.
A compact, hand-drawn print style with mostly monoline strokes and softly irregular contours. Letterforms are tall and condensed with lively, uneven rhythm, showing subtle wobble, slight tapering, and occasional bulb-like terminals that mimic marker or brush pressure. Curves are rounded and open, counters are small, and baseline/height consistency is intentionally loose, giving the alphabet a sketchy, human-made texture while remaining legible in short text.
Best suited for display settings where a handmade, personable voice is desired—posters, short headlines, packaging, labels, and craft-oriented designs. It can also work for children’s materials or playful editorial callouts, especially where a compact, space-saving letter width is helpful.
The overall tone is friendly and offbeat, with a storybook and DIY character that feels spontaneous rather than polished. Its narrow, upright stance reads energetic and a little mischievous, suited to lighthearted messaging and informal branding.
The design appears intended to emulate quick hand lettering with a narrow footprint, prioritizing charm and approachability over geometric precision. Its controlled simplicity and low-contrast strokes aim to keep text readable while preserving a distinctly human, drawn texture.
Uppercase shapes tend to be simplified and narrow, while lowercase adds extra personality through varied ascenders/descenders and occasional uneven joins. Numerals follow the same hand-rendered logic with soft curves and slightly inconsistent proportions, reinforcing the casual, drawn-by-hand feel.