Print Heriy 6 is a very bold, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, game titles, book covers, event flyers, medieval, fantasy, gothic, rugged, dramatic, thematic display, historical mood, dramatic impact, hand-drawn texture, angular, calligraphic, brushlike, spiky, textured.
A heavily inked, hand-drawn blackletter-inspired design with chunky, angular forms and chiseled terminals. Strokes are broad and taper into sharp points, giving the letters a carved, brush-cut feel rather than a strictly geometric construction. Counters are small and irregular, and the silhouettes show lively variation and slight wobble typical of drawn lettering. The lowercase maintains a sturdy, compact build, while capitals are more ornate with pointed arms and decorative hooks; numerals follow the same dense, cut-paper rhythm.
Best suited to display use where its strong texture and medieval flavor can lead: headlines, posters, game and film titles, book covers, and themed event materials. It can also work for short pull quotes or logo-style wordmarks in fantasy, gothic, or historical contexts, especially with generous size and spacing.
The font evokes medieval manuscript lettering and fantasy titling, with an assertive, dramatic presence. Its sharp spikes and dark color create a slightly ominous, adventurous tone that reads as old-world, arcane, and theatrical rather than polished or contemporary.
The design appears intended to deliver a bold, hand-rendered blackletter look that feels energetic and slightly unruly, prioritizing atmosphere and impact over neutral readability. Its exaggerated points and cut-brush modulation suggest a goal of creating instantly thematic lettering for dramatic, story-driven applications.
In text settings the strong texture and tight internal spaces create a bold black mass on the line, producing a rhythmic, jagged word shape. Distinctive forms like the single-storey lowercase shapes and hooked capitals add character, but the dense strokes and stylization can reduce clarity at smaller sizes or in long passages.