Print Forir 6 is a bold, very narrow, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, logos, menus, energetic, casual, handmade, playful, streetwise, informality, personality, impact, quickness, approachability, brushy, compact, condensed, expressive, inked edges.
The letterforms are compact and tall with a pronounced rightward slant and a narrow overall footprint. Strokes resemble a brush or marker, with subtly uneven edges, tapered joins, and small variations that create a natural handwritten texture. Curves are simplified and slightly angular in places, counters are relatively tight, and terminals often finish in soft points or blunt, brushy ends, producing a lively, high-contrast-in-feel silhouette without looking overly ornate.
It works well for short-to-medium text where personality is the priority: posters, packaging callouts, café menus, event flyers, apparel graphics, and social media headlines. The strong presence and compact width make it suited to logos or wordmarks that want a brush-written feel. For best results, use it at display sizes or in high-contrast color pairings where the textured edges and tight counters remain clear.
This font conveys an energetic, human, and slightly mischievous tone, like quick marker lettering made in the moment. Its informal rhythm and lively slant give it a friendly, conversational voice that feels approachable rather than polished. The overall impression is expressive and modern-casual, with a touch of handmade attitude.
The design appears intended to mimic fast, confident hand lettering while remaining readable across mixed-case text. Its narrow, upright-to-slanted construction and bold stroke presence suggest a focus on fitting impactful words into limited horizontal space without losing a handmade character. The consistent texture across caps, lowercase, and numerals indicates a cohesive, headline-friendly handwritten system.
Uppercase forms read as tall and assertive with simplified, gestural construction, while the lowercase maintains a quick handwritten cadence with minimal connective behavior. Numerals share the same brush-driven weight and slant, matching the alphabet’s texture and making them suitable for price tags, dates, and short numeric labels.