Print Ebbuv 6 is a very light, narrow, very high contrast, upright, very short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, packaging, greeting cards, quotes, whimsical, sketchy, airy, playful, folkloric, handmade charm, informal display, expressive lettering, light texture, spidery, calligraphic, loopy, bouncy, uneven.
A delicate handwritten print with spidery strokes and pronounced thick–thin modulation, as if drawn with a flexible pen. Letterforms are narrow and tall with generous ascenders and descenders, and the texture stays light while still showing occasional inked-in terminals and tapered entries. Curves often loop or hook at ends, counters can be slightly open, and stroke joins vary from crisp to softly wobbly, reinforcing an organic, drawn-on-paper rhythm. Spacing and widths fluctuate from glyph to glyph, giving lines a lively, irregular cadence.
Best suited for short display settings where personality matters more than strict regularity—headlines, posters, packaging accents, greeting cards, and pull quotes. It can also work for logos or labels seeking a handcrafted feel, but its fine strokes and variable spacing make it less ideal for long text or very small sizes.
The overall tone is whimsical and slightly eccentric, with a storybook, hand-drawn charm. Its airy construction and playful terminals create a lighthearted, personal feel that reads more like casual notes or handcrafted signage than formal typography.
The design appears intended to capture the immediacy of quick pen lettering—thin, high-contrast strokes with occasional heavier touches—while keeping letters mostly unconnected for easy placement in titles and decorative phrases. Its irregular rhythm and expressive terminals prioritize charm and individuality over typographic uniformity.
Uppercase characters tend to be more expressive and decorative than the lowercase, with larger swashes and more dramatic loops, while the lowercase remains simplified and compact. Numerals follow the same light, drawn style and vary in width and emphasis, which adds character but reduces uniformity in tabular contexts.