Print Gylim 6 is a bold, very narrow, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, labels, book covers, playful, hand-drawn, quirky, rustic, retro, handmade feel, display impact, casual voice, retro flavor, blocky, condensed, wobbly, rounded corners, irregular.
A condensed, heavy-stroked display face with hand-drawn, slightly wobbly contours and softly squared corners. Strokes are mostly monoline with minimal contrast, and terminals tend to look blunted or brushed-in, giving edges a subtly uneven finish. Counters are compact and often angular-rectangular (notably in O, P, D, and numerals), while curves are simplified into squarish arcs. Spacing and widths vary from glyph to glyph, creating an organic rhythm; lowercase forms stay fairly compact with a straightforward, print-like construction and small, simple i/j dots.
Best suited for display use where personality is desired—posters, headlines, packaging, labels, and book covers. It can work for short blurbs or pull quotes at larger sizes, where the quirky irregularities and tight counters remain clear.
The overall tone is casual and characterful, with a playful, homemade energy. Its narrow, chunky silhouettes and imperfect edges suggest an approachable, slightly retro craft feel rather than a polished geometric sans.
The design appears intended to mimic informal hand-lettered print with a condensed footprint and strong ink presence, prioritizing charm and immediacy over typographic neutrality. Its simplified geometry and uneven stroke edges aim to feel human-made while remaining cohesive across an alphabet and numerals.
The font maintains a consistent condensed color on the page, but individual letters show intentional irregularities in side bearings and stroke edges that read as hand-rendered. The punctuation and numerals match the same squarish, cut-in counter style, helping it hold together in short text settings.