Print Bonem 6 is a regular weight, narrow, low contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: packaging, kids, posters, social, labels, playful, friendly, casual, handmade, approachable, human warmth, casual clarity, playful display, handmade texture, informal branding, rounded, monoline, bouncy, loose, quirky.
A casual, hand-drawn print with monoline strokes, rounded terminals, and gently irregular contours that preserve a natural marker/pen feel. Letterforms are generally upright with a compact, slightly condensed stance and modest ascender/descender presence. Curves are soft and open, counters are simple, and joins are unforced, producing a light, airy rhythm. Spacing feels hand-set rather than mechanically uniform, with subtle variation in widths and a lively baseline texture.
Works well for packaging, labels, posters, and social media graphics where an approachable handwritten feel is desired. It suits kid-focused or educational materials, casual invitations, and short display copy, and can also support UI microcopy or captions when a friendly, human tone is more important than typographic strictness.
The overall tone is warm and informal, with a playful, conversational voice. Its slight wobble and softened shapes read as personal and friendly, suggesting handwritten notes, classroom materials, or lighthearted branding rather than formal editorial typography.
The design appears intended to capture the immediacy of quick, neat handwriting in a clean print style: readable, upbeat, and intentionally imperfect. It aims to add personality and warmth to headlines and short passages without relying on connected script forms.
Capitals are straightforward and rounded, while lowercase introduces more personality through uneven stroke endings and small idiosyncrasies (notably in letters like a, g, k, and y). Numerals follow the same simple, handwritten construction, keeping the set cohesive in mixed alphanumeric settings. The texture remains consistent across the sample text, maintaining legibility while still clearly reading as hand-drawn.