Print Kirey 6 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: children’s books, education, packaging, posters, greeting cards, playful, friendly, casual, kidlike, approachable, handwritten feel, approachability, everyday casual, playful legibility, human warmth, rounded, monoline, soft terminals, bouncy baseline, quirky.
A rounded, monoline handwritten print with softly blunted terminals and gently uneven curves. Strokes keep a consistent thickness while forms vary slightly from glyph to glyph, creating an organic rhythm rather than strict geometric regularity. Capitals are simple and open with broad, rounded bowls; lowercase shows a single-storey a and g and a tall, loopless l, with lightly irregular joins and spacing. Figures are similarly informal and rounded, with uncomplicated shapes and a friendly, drawn-by-hand consistency.
Well suited for children’s titles, educational worksheets, activity books, craft branding, and friendly retail packaging. It also works for posters, invitations, greeting cards, social graphics, and any interface or label text that benefits from an informal, human touch.
The overall tone is warm and informal, reading as cheerful and easygoing rather than polished or corporate. Its slightly bouncy shapes and softened corners give it a youthful, conversational feel that suggests personal notes, classroom materials, and playful packaging.
The design appears intended to mimic neat hand-printed lettering with a consistent marker-like stroke, prioritizing approachability and legibility over strict typographic precision. Its rounded construction and modest irregularities aim to communicate friendliness and everyday authenticity in a versatile, readable way.
Word shapes stay clear at text sizes thanks to open counters and straightforward construction, while the hand-drawn irregularities add personality best suited to short-to-medium runs. The simplified forms and soft rounding help prevent harsh spots in dense settings, though the lively spacing and variable widths will feel most natural when used as display or supporting text rather than long-form reading.