Print Esfi 6 is a very bold, wide, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Faculty' by Device, 'Bruna' by Lechuga Type, 'MC Maxes' by Maulana Creative, 'Mundo Sans' by Monotype, 'Byker' by The Northern Block, and 'Boulder' by Umka Type (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, logotypes, stickers, playful, handmade, bold, quirky, retro, handmade texture, playful impact, retro print feel, display emphasis, rough-edged, chunky, rounded, inked, imperfect.
A chunky, heavy display face with broad, rounded letterforms and visibly irregular outlines. Strokes have a hand-inked, slightly ragged edge and small nicks that create a subtle stamped/printed texture rather than clean vector smoothness. Counters are generally generous and open for the weight, with simplified construction and softened corners that keep the shapes friendly. Overall spacing feels sturdy and compact, with a lively rhythm created by minor per-glyph wobble and uneven contour tension.
Best suited to headlines and short, high-impact copy where texture and personality are desirable—posters, event graphics, product packaging, stickers, and bold brand moments. It can work for playful logotypes and punchy callouts, but the distressed contours make it less appropriate for long-form text or small UI settings.
The tone is loud, friendly, and mischievous—more craft and character than precision. Its roughened edges and buoyant proportions suggest casual confidence, evoking handmade signage, playful packaging, and nostalgic print ephemera.
The design appears intended to deliver an informal, hand-printed feel with strong silhouette presence and a deliberately imperfect finish. It prioritizes personality and a tactile, inked look over geometric consistency, aiming for eye-catching display performance.
In the sample text, the dark massing reads strongly at large sizes, while the textured edges add visual noise that becomes more pronounced as size decreases. The figures match the same chunky, softened construction, keeping numerals consistent with the letters for headline use.