Print Korek 6 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: kids branding, packaging, posters, social media, stickers, playful, friendly, casual, youthful, hand-drawn, approachability, handmade feel, easy readability, casual tone, rounded, soft, bouncy, chunky, informal.
A rounded, marker-like handwritten print with soft corners and slightly uneven stroke endings that mimic natural pen pressure. Letterforms are broadly monoline with gentle wobble, moderate openness in counters, and simplified construction that favors smooth curves over sharp joins. Proportions feel compact and slightly bouncy, with subtle irregularities in widths and spacing that add a human rhythm while staying consistently legible across mixed case and numerals.
Works best for short to medium text where a friendly, handmade impression is desired—kids-oriented branding, playful packaging, café menus, posters, invitations, greeting cards, stickers, and casual social graphics. It’s particularly effective for headings, captions, and callouts where warmth and approachability are more important than strict typographic neutrality.
The tone is approachable and lighthearted, evoking classroom notes, craft labels, and everyday doodles. Its relaxed rhythm and friendly shapes make it feel conversational and non-technical, with a warm, upbeat personality suited to informal messaging.
Likely designed to provide a clean, legible handwritten print that feels naturally drawn without becoming messy. The consistent stroke weight and rounded terminals suggest an emphasis on readability and charm for everyday display and informal communication.
Capitals are simple and sturdy with a hand-drawn steadiness, while lowercase forms keep a rounded, single-story feel (notably in a and g) that reinforces the casual voice. Numerals are similarly playful and chunky, matching the letter weight and maintaining clear differentiation at display sizes. Overall texture is slightly mottled due to organic stroke edges, which reads as authentic handwriting rather than geometric precision.