Print Wukeb 6 is a bold, narrow, high contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, packaging, book covers, children’s, comics, playful, handmade, quirky, vintage, friendly, handmade texture, expressive display, casual charm, retro feel, rounded, inky, roughened, whimsical, cartoonish.
A compact, hand-drawn display face with rounded forms, slightly irregular stroke edges, and a wet-ink/brushy texture that creates small nicks and bumps along contours. Letter structure is simple and mostly monoline in construction, but with noticeable thick-to-thin moments at curves and terminals, giving a lively, uneven color. Counters are small to medium and often asymmetrical, while terminals tend to be blunt and softly tapered. Overall spacing is tight and the rhythm is bouncy, with subtle per-glyph variation that reinforces the drawn-by-hand character.
Best suited to short-to-medium display settings where texture and personality are an asset: posters, product packaging, café/food branding, book and album covers, kids’ materials, comics, and social graphics. It can also work for punchy UI labels or section headers when a friendly, handmade tone is desired, but the rough edges and tight rhythm make it less ideal for long-form body text.
The font feels informal and mischievous, like marker lettering or stamped ink with a bit of wear. Its quirky irregularities read as approachable and humorous rather than refined, lending a casual, retro-leaning charm suited to expressive headlines.
The design appears intended to mimic casual hand-lettering with a slightly distressed ink finish, prioritizing warmth and character over strict uniformity. Its compact proportions and lively stroke behavior aim to create strong, attention-getting word shapes in headlines and branded phrases.
Uppercase and lowercase share a consistent handmade logic, with the lowercase showing especially playful shapes (single-storey a and g, compact bowls, and uneven shoulders). Numerals are chunky and slightly wobbly, matching the same inky edge texture and giving figures a hand-lettered personality.