Print Dagot 6 is a regular weight, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, book covers, game titles, packaging, logos, medieval, hand-crafted, storybook, rustic, mystical, fantasy tone, historic flavor, handmade texture, display impact, angular, wedge serif, calligraphic, textured, irregular.
This font uses compact, hand-drawn letterforms with sharp, wedge-like terminals and subtly uneven stroke edges that create a carved or brushed texture. Strokes show a mild calligraphic modulation, with pointed entries, tapered ends, and occasional hooked flicks that give many glyphs a slightly spiky silhouette. Curves are rounded but not perfectly symmetrical, and the overall rhythm is lively due to small, intentional inconsistencies in width and counter shapes. Numerals follow the same chiseled, tapered logic, with distinctive angled joins and stylized curves.
It works best for short to medium display settings such as fantasy or historical-themed posters, book and chapter titles, game UI headings, packaging accents, and logo wordmarks. The textured stroke edges and stylized terminals also suit signage-style applications where a hand-crafted feel is desired more than neutral readability in long text.
The overall tone feels medieval and folkloric, evoking fantasy titles, old-world signage, and hand-lettered manuscript flavor. Its energetic, slightly jagged contours suggest craft and theatrics rather than polish, lending a mischievous, mystical mood that reads as expressive and characterful.
The design appears intended to capture a hand-rendered, medieval-inspired print look with chiseled terminals and calligraphic energy, balancing legibility with decorative edge. Its variable stroke character and lively rhythm suggest a focus on atmosphere and narrative tone for display typography.
Caps carry a strong display presence with pronounced terminals and slightly dramatic internal shaping, while lowercase maintains the same angular personality without becoming fully cursive. The texture and pointed details are more noticeable at larger sizes, where the hand-cut character becomes part of the aesthetic.