Print Nymot 6 is a light, normal width, medium contrast, italic, very short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, packaging, quotes, social graphics, titles, casual, expressive, personal, lively, sketchy, handwritten feel, informal tone, expressive display, quick note, brushed, slanted, loose, spiky, irregular.
A slanted, hand-drawn print style with brisk, brushed-looking strokes and noticeable baseline bounce. Letterforms show uneven stroke edges and occasional sharp terminals, with a mix of quick curves and angular joins that creates a lively rhythm. Proportions are narrow-to-wide depending on the glyph, and spacing feels naturalistic rather than mechanically even; uppercase forms are relatively tall while the lowercase sits small with compact counters.
Works best in short to medium-length settings where a human, handwritten voice is desired—posters, packaging accents, pull quotes, social media graphics, and casual titling. The lively stroke texture and variable proportions are well-suited to display sizes and can add personality to simple layouts.
The overall tone feels informal and personal, like fast marker or pen lettering used for notes, labels, or spontaneous headlines. Its energetic slant and slightly scratchy texture read as expressive and human rather than polished or corporate.
The design appears intended to mimic quick, natural handwriting in an unconnected print form, prioritizing spontaneity and character over strict uniformity. The consistent slant and rhythmic stroke movement suggest a deliberate effort to capture an authentic, brushed note-taking feel for expressive display text.
Uppercase shapes carry the strongest character, with long, sweeping diagonals and open curves, while the lowercase remains simplified and compact. Numerals are similarly handwritten, with varied widths and a loosely consistent angle that keeps multi-line text cohesive despite the intentionally irregular details.