Print Undej 6 is a regular weight, narrow, high contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, packaging, book covers, posters, greeting cards, playful, storybook, crafty, whimsical, friendly, hand-lettered charm, display emphasis, human warmth, vintage whimsy, calligraphic, brushed, tapered, rounded, bouncy.
This font presents informal, hand-drawn letterforms with a slightly compressed overall footprint and lively, uneven rhythm. Strokes show pronounced thick–thin modulation with tapered terminals, as if made by a flexible pen or brush note, producing sharp hairlines alongside heavier verticals. Curves are rounded and organic, counters are compact, and spacing varies subtly from glyph to glyph, reinforcing a human, written feel. Uppercase shapes are clean but characterful, while lowercase forms lean toward simplified, single-storey constructions with a modest x-height and tall ascenders that add vertical sparkle. Figures are similarly hand-shaped, with expressive curves and occasional angled entry/exit strokes.
Best suited to display settings such as headlines, short quotes, packaging titles, posters, and book or chapter headers where its hand-made contrast and lively shapes can be appreciated. It can also work for greeting cards and craft branding, but it’s less ideal for dense body text where the sharp modulation and tight counters may reduce comfort at small sizes.
The tone is warm and lightly theatrical—more storybook and crafty than formal. Its high-contrast, hand-rendered texture feels personal and charming, suggesting headers that want to sound approachable, imaginative, and a bit vintage.
The design appears intended to mimic neat hand-lettering made with a flexible, high-contrast tool, balancing readability with expressive, personable texture. It aims to deliver a distinctive, crafted voice for display typography while keeping forms familiar enough for quick recognition.
Distinctive stroke tapering and occasional flared or hooked terminals create a calligraphic cadence without connecting scripts. The narrow proportions help it stack into compact headlines, while the variability in widths and stroke endings keeps long passages feeling animated rather than mechanical.