Print Wobon 6 is a regular weight, normal width, medium contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, branding, packaging, social media, headlines, energetic, hand-drawn, expressive, casual, playful, handwritten warmth, visual energy, craft feel, display impact, brushy, textured, slanted, dynamic, organic.
A slanted, brush-like handwriting style with lively stroke modulation and visible texture that suggests dry-brush or marker drag. Letterforms are built from tapered, slightly irregular strokes with occasional spur-like terminals and a gently bouncing baseline rhythm. Spacing is moderately open and the forms stay unconnected, keeping a printed handwriting feel while maintaining consistent overall proportions across the set. Numerals and capitals carry the same brisk, gestural construction, with subtle width variation that adds a natural, hand-rendered cadence in words.
Works best for display settings such as posters, cover art, packaging callouts, social posts, and casual branding where an expressive handwritten accent is desired. It can also suit short blocks of text at comfortable sizes, especially when the goal is a friendly, crafted look rather than maximum neutrality or long-form readability.
The font conveys an upbeat, informal tone—more sketchbook and headline-friendly than polished calligraphy. Its textured strokes and forward slant read as energetic and personable, making copy feel spontaneous and human. Overall it leans toward a playful, slightly dramatic voice that can add motion and character to short messages.
The design appears intended to emulate fast, confident hand lettering with a brushy tool, prioritizing motion, texture, and personality. Its consistent slant and printed construction suggest a versatile display handwriting meant to stand out while remaining easy to set in mixed-case words.
Texture is a defining feature: many strokes show internal roughness and small notches, which increases personality but can reduce clarity at very small sizes. Curves and diagonals have a quick, gestural snap, and repeated letters show controlled variation rather than strict mechanical sameness.