Print Vilib 6 is a light, very narrow, medium contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, book covers, packaging, greeting cards, playful, whimsical, friendly, quirky, casual, hand-drawn feel, informal display, personality, friendly tone, tall, spindly, monoline, rounded terminals, bouncy.
A tall, slim handwritten print with a lightly drawn, mostly monoline stroke and subtle contrast from natural pen pressure. The letterforms are narrow with generous vertical reach, giving a spindly silhouette and airy texture in text. Curves are soft and slightly irregular, and terminals tend to round off or taper gently rather than end in hard slabs. Spacing and widths vary by character, creating an uneven, human rhythm that reads as deliberately informal rather than mechanically uniform.
Works best for short to medium display settings—headlines, posters, covers, and packaging—where its tall, narrow forms can add character without relying on heavy weight. It also fits casual editorial accents, invitations, greeting cards, and playful branding where an informal handwritten print is appropriate.
The overall tone is playful and a bit eccentric, like neat hand-printing with personality. Its narrow, elongated proportions feel lighthearted and storybook-adjacent, while the small inconsistencies add warmth and approachability. The result is friendly and conversational, suited to designs that want charm more than formality.
The design appears intended to emulate tidy, hand-printed lettering with a tall, condensed stance and a lightly sketched stroke. By preserving minor irregularities and variable character widths, it prioritizes human feel and charm over strict typographic rigidity, aiming for an expressive, approachable display voice.
Capitals are especially elongated and attention-grabbing, which can create a pronounced vertical cadence in headlines. Numerals follow the same hand-drawn logic with simple, open shapes that keep the texture consistent across mixed text. The very slim strokes and condensed build can look delicate at small sizes, but become distinctive when given room to breathe.