Print Wimig 6 is a light, narrow, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: quotes, headlines, invitations, packaging, posters, casual, airy, lively, friendly, expressive, handwritten feel, casual display, personal tone, quick notation, modern friendly, monoline, brushed, slanted, loose, tall.
A slanted handwritten print with a brisk, brush-like stroke and mostly monoline construction, punctuated by subtle pressure-based swelling on curves and turns. Letterforms are tall and lean with generous apertures and an open, rhythmic spacing that keeps words moving forward. Strokes taper at entries and exits, with occasional hooked terminals and quick cross-strokes that feel drawn in a single pass. Overall consistency is good, but slight irregularities in curvature and joining angles preserve an authentic hand-rendered texture.
Works well for short headlines, pull quotes, greeting cards, invitations, and casual branding where a handwritten voice is desired. It also suits packaging accents and poster titling, especially when paired with a neutral sans for supporting text. In longer passages it remains readable, but it’s best used where its light stroke and brisk slant can stay clear.
The font reads as informal and upbeat, with a breezy, conversational tone. Its swift slant and sketchy terminals give it an energetic, on-the-go personality that feels personable rather than polished. The overall impression is modern-casual, suitable for messaging that aims to be approachable and lightly expressive.
Designed to emulate quick, confident handwriting in unconnected print letterforms, balancing legibility with a spontaneous brush-pen feel. The goal appears to be a personable, contemporary script-like impression without full cursive connections, keeping the texture lively while remaining practical for everyday display use.
Uppercase shapes stay simple and legible, with distinctive, looped or swept forms in letters like Q and R that add character without becoming ornate. Lowercase maintains a compact, tidy feel with clear counters, while numerals mirror the same quick, slightly calligraphic motion. The texture remains clean enough for continuous text, but the thin strokes and lively angles make it more effective at moderate sizes than at very small settings.