Print Ohgez 6 is a very bold, normal width, medium contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, book covers, event promos, rustic, playful, spooky, handcrafted, retro, handmade impact, playful display, thematic texture, poster punch, chunky, rough-cut, wobbly, inked, irregular.
A chunky, hand-drawn print face with softly wobbling outlines and uneven stroke edges that suggest a brushy or carved stamp texture. Letterforms are compact and heavy with rounded corners, irregular joins, and subtly pinched counters that vary from glyph to glyph. The baseline and sidebearings feel intentionally inconsistent, creating a lively rhythm, while a slight slant and bouncy proportions keep the forms from feeling rigid. Numerals share the same blobby, cut-paper silhouette and maintain strong presence at display sizes.
This font works well for posters, bold headlines, packaging accents, and book or album covers where a handcrafted, characterful voice is desired. It’s especially effective for themed event promotions, playful branding, and display typography that benefits from a rough, handmade texture at medium-to-large sizes.
The overall tone is mischievous and theatrical, with a rustic, DIY character that can read as Halloween-adjacent without committing to a specific theme. Its bold, inky massing feels friendly and energetic, like hand-lettered signage or a playful poster headline. The roughness adds attitude and a touch of grit, giving it a quirky, storybook-like voice.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum impact with an informal, hand-rendered feel—combining heavy shapes with deliberately irregular contours to evoke stamped, brushed, or cut-out lettering. Its proportions and lively rhythm prioritize personality and atmosphere over typographic neutrality.
The texture and irregularity are central to the design: edges look intentionally torn or chiseled, and internal shapes are slightly asymmetrical. In longer text the lively contours add personality but also create a dense color, making it best suited to short bursts rather than small, continuous reading.