Print Fubet 6 is a bold, narrow, low contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, stickers, kids media, playful, crafty, handmade, friendly, comic, handmade feel, casual display, playful impact, marker texture, brushy, chunky, rounded, ragged edges, high ink gain.
A heavy, marker-like handwritten print with thick strokes and softly rounded corners, rendered with visibly irregular edges and slight wobble that suggests a dry brush or felt-tip texture. The letterforms are compact and mostly upright, with simple geometric construction in the bowls and counters and occasional flattened terminals. Stroke weight is generally consistent, but the outlines show intentional roughness and small variations that create an uneven, inked silhouette. Spacing feels lively and a bit inconsistent, contributing to a hand-drawn rhythm rather than a rigid grid.
Best suited for short headlines, posters, stickers, labels, and packaging where a handcrafted, informal voice is desired. It also works well for children’s content, event promos, and social graphics that benefit from a bold, friendly handwritten presence. For longer paragraphs, the heavy texture and irregular edges may read best at larger sizes.
The overall tone is casual and upbeat, with a crafty, DIY personality that reads as approachable and a little mischievous. Its textured, imperfect outlines add warmth and informality, evoking handmade signage, classroom materials, or playful packaging.
The design appears intended to mimic hand-painted or marker-drawn lettering with a consistent, bold fill and deliberately rough edges for authenticity. It prioritizes personality and impact over typographic refinement, aiming to feel spontaneous and human while remaining legible in display settings.
Uppercase forms feel blocky and attention-grabbing, while lowercase maintains the same chunky texture for a cohesive texture across text. Numerals match the same hand-rendered weight and irregular outline, making them suitable for display contexts where personality matters more than precision.