Print Hagar 6 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, packaging, book covers, game ui, playful, mystical, quirky, hand-drawn, storybook, whimsy, fantasy mood, handmade texture, thematic display, flared, tapered, curvilinear, spiky, soft-edged.
A hand-drawn display face with rounded, curvilinear construction and frequent tapered terminals that swell and pinch like a brush or stylus stroke. Letterforms lean on open counters and simplified geometry, but introduce sharp notches, hook-like entry strokes, and occasional inner cuts that add texture. Proportions vary from glyph to glyph, with slightly irregular widths and lively rhythm; curves dominate, and straighter stems often end in pointed or flared tips. Numerals follow the same organic logic, with smooth bowls and distinctive, sometimes teardrop-shaped finishes.
Best suited to short-to-medium display settings where its quirky shapes can be appreciated: titles, posters, playful packaging, event flyers, and book covers. It also fits fantasy or casual game interfaces and branded wordmarks that want a handmade, slightly spooky personality. For long body text, it will work more as an accent style than a primary reading face.
The overall tone feels whimsical and slightly occult or fantasy-leaning—more enchanted than cute—thanks to the clawed terminals and carved-looking details. It reads as playful and idiosyncratic, like lettering for a magical shop sign or a storybook heading, with just enough edge to suggest spells, potions, and Halloween atmospheres.
The design appears intended to deliver an informal, hand-lettered look with a distinctive fantasy flavor, using tapered strokes and hooked terminals to create character without relying on heavy contrast. Its irregular width and decorative details prioritize personality and thematic mood over strict typographic neutrality.
The texture comes from consistent terminal behavior (tapered, hooked, and sometimes spurred) and from occasional interior slits that create a cutout feel in select letters. Spacing appears fairly even in the sample text, but the varied glyph widths and decorative terminals give lines a bouncy, hand-set cadence.