Print Fonok 6 is a bold, narrow, high contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, album art, headlines, packaging, social graphics, grunge, energetic, rebellious, raw, expressive, handmade feel, gritty texture, dynamic motion, attention grabbing, brushy, inked, textured, ragged, irregular.
An expressive, brush-like handwritten print with a pronounced rightward slant and compact proportions. Strokes are thick but highly uneven, with sharp tapers, occasional blunt terminals, and visible dry-brush texture that creates speckling and small voids inside counters. Letterforms show lively baseline bounce and irregular widths, producing a hand-drawn rhythm that feels spontaneous rather than geometric. The overall silhouette is condensed and upright in structure, but animated by jittery curves, angled joins, and variable stroke pressure.
Best suited to short, high-impact text such as posters, event flyers, album/mixtape graphics, apparel slogans, and bold packaging callouts. It can also work for social media headlines or pull quotes where an intentionally rough, hand-painted personality is desired; for longer passages, the texture and irregularity are more effective at display sizes.
The font conveys a raw, street-level energy—part marker scrawl, part ink-brush gesture. Its distressed texture and assertive stroke weight give it a gritty, DIY tone that reads as rebellious, urgent, and attention-seeking rather than refined or calm.
The design appears intended to simulate fast, pressure-driven brush lettering with deliberate distress, prioritizing attitude and motion over uniformity. It aims to deliver a handcrafted, gritty presence that looks printed from real ink rather than digitally perfect outlines.
Texture is a defining feature: many glyphs include broken edges and interior wear that will become more pronounced at smaller sizes or in low-resolution output. Spacing appears intentionally loose and inconsistent to preserve the handwritten feel, while the slant and heavy strokes help maintain momentum across words.