Print Esmo 6 is a bold, narrow, medium contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, album art, packaging, social media, grungy, casual, energetic, raw, handmade, handmade feel, rough texture, high impact, casual display, brushy, textured, irregular, rough-edged, chunky.
A heavy, brush-drawn print style with visibly uneven stroke edges and occasional dry-brush breaks. Letterforms are compact and slightly condensed, with simplified, rounded counters and irregular terminals that flare or taper as if made with a loaded marker or brush. Curves and bowls are somewhat squarish and blobby, and spacing is inconsistent in a natural, handwritten way, producing a lively rhythm rather than mechanical uniformity. Numerals match the same rough, inked texture and compact proportions.
Works best for short-to-medium display text where the brush texture and uneven edges can be appreciated—such as posters, punchy headlines, cover art, packaging callouts, and social media graphics. It can also add a handmade accent to labels or merch, especially when paired with a cleaner sans for supporting text.
The overall tone is informal and expressive, conveying a handcrafted, slightly gritty attitude. It feels playful and spontaneous, with enough roughness to suggest DIY culture, street-poster energy, or an edgy notebook scrawl while remaining readable at display sizes.
Likely designed to emulate quick hand-painted or marker-brush lettering with a deliberately rough finish. The goal appears to be an approachable, high-impact display voice that prioritizes personality and texture over strict typographic regularity.
Uppercase and lowercase share a consistent brush texture, but maintain the charming inconsistencies of hand lettering (variable widths, shifting stroke pressure, and irregular joins). The rugged contours are a defining feature; they will become less distinct at very small sizes and more characterful when set larger.