Print Ipsu 6 is a very bold, narrow, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, branding, packaging, album art, energetic, rebellious, gritty, playful, urgent, handmade impact, speedy emphasis, expressive texture, display voice, brushy, slanted, angular, jagged, high-impact.
A heavy brush-like handwritten face with a pronounced right slant and compact proportions. Strokes show brisk, pressure-driven modulation with sharp wedge terminals and occasional blunt, ink-loaded joins, giving letters a jagged, cut-brush texture rather than a smooth calligraphic finish. Counters tend to be tight and irregular, and widths vary noticeably from glyph to glyph, creating a lively, hand-made rhythm. The overall silhouette reads dense and punchy, with many forms leaning on diagonal strokes and pointed shoulders.
Well-suited for posters, event promos, packaging callouts, and branding that needs a loud, hand-painted feel. It works particularly well for short headlines, logos, social graphics, and apparel-style statements where texture and motion are assets. Use with generous spacing and larger sizes for best clarity.
The font conveys speed and attitude—like quick marker lettering for a poster or a loud headline. Its rough edges and aggressive slant feel expressive and a bit unruly, while the consistent boldness keeps it confident and attention-grabbing. The tone lands somewhere between streetwise, sporty, and comic-book emphasis.
Likely designed to mimic fast, confident brush lettering with bold strokes and a dynamic forward lean. The intention appears to prioritize impact and personality over precision, delivering a hand-made look that feels spontaneous and expressive in display settings.
Legibility holds best at display sizes where the brush texture and narrow apertures can breathe; in longer lines the compact counters and irregular widths create a busy texture. Numerals and capitals match the same brisk, brush-cut construction, keeping a cohesive, high-energy voice across the set.