Print Omgak 6 is a bold, narrow, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, packaging, headlines, social media, signage, playful, casual, expressive, punchy, friendly, handmade feel, high impact, friendly tone, quick lettering, display emphasis, brushy, rounded, organic, bouncy, chunky.
A lively brush-printed hand with thick, ink-rich strokes and softly tapered terminals. Letterforms lean forward with a quick, gestural rhythm, mixing rounded bowls with sharp flicks and occasional wedge-like starts and finishes. Strokes show subtle pressure variation rather than formal contrast, and spacing feels irregular in an intentional, hand-drawn way, producing a buoyant baseline and varied silhouettes across the set. Counters are generally compact and the overall color is dense, making the font read as a bold, energetic marker or brush script rendered as unconnected print letters.
Best suited for short display text where personality matters: posters, event flyers, packaging callouts, café/food branding, and social graphics. The heavy stroke weight and lively rhythm make it effective for punchy headlines and logos, while longer paragraphs may feel busy due to the irregular spacing and dense color.
The font projects an upbeat, informal tone with a spirited, slightly mischievous energy. Its brisk slant and chunky brush texture suggest hand-made immediacy, like a quick sign, menu special, or poster headline written with confidence. The overall impression is friendly and attention-grabbing rather than refined or corporate.
Designed to emulate fast, confident brush lettering in a bold printed style, prioritizing expressiveness and impact over strict consistency. The goal appears to be a hand-made, approachable voice that reads quickly and adds motion and charm to contemporary display typography.
Uppercase forms tend to be broad and gestural with simplified construction, while lowercase shows more cursive influence in shapes like a, g, and y. Numerals match the same brush logic, with rounded forms and brisk entry/exit strokes. The texture is smooth and filled-in (not dry-brush), so it holds a strong solid presence at display sizes.