Print Yodib 6 is a very light, very narrow, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, packaging, greeting cards, book covers, quirky, whimsical, sketchy, airy, casual, handwritten feel, casual display, quirky character, light texture, spidery, loose, tall, angular, textured.
A tall, wiry handwritten print with a rightward slant and a distinctly narrow footprint. Strokes are very thin with subtle pressure variation and occasional darkened starts/stops, creating a slightly scratchy, pen-on-paper texture. The letterforms favor long ascenders/descenders, small counters, and open, simplified construction, with gentle irregularities in curves and joins that keep the rhythm lively rather than mechanical. Overall spacing feels light and a bit uneven in a natural way, reinforcing the drawn character.
Best used at display sizes where the thin strokes and tall proportions can breathe—headlines, short blurbs, packaging callouts, posters, and cover titling. It can work for small, casual annotations in short bursts, but the light stroke and narrow forms favor larger settings and moderate line lengths for comfortable reading.
The tone is playful and offbeat, like quick marginal notes or a quirky journal title. Its spindly lines and exaggerated height give it a slightly eerie, storybook flavor while still reading as friendly and informal.
Likely designed to capture the spontaneity of quick pen lettering in an unconnected print style, emphasizing height, narrowness, and a lightly textured stroke for personality. The goal appears to be a distinctive handwritten voice that feels human and slightly eccentric without becoming overly decorative.
Uppercase forms read like narrow sign-lettering, while lowercase has a bouncier baseline and more pronounced descenders (notably in letters like g, j, y). Numerals are similarly slim and handwritten, matching the font’s airy color and irregular stroke endings.