Print Fariv 6 is a bold, narrow, high contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, album covers, streetwear, event flyers, raw, urgent, gritty, energetic, rebellious, handmade look, impact, texture, motion, brushy, jagged, textured, angular, expressive.
A rough, brush-driven print style with sharply tapered strokes and visibly torn, ragged edges. The letterforms lean forward with a compressed overall footprint and lively, uneven stroke rhythm, mixing thick pressure areas with thin, flicked terminals. Counters are compact and sometimes irregular, and curves resolve into angular corners, giving the alphabet a carved, scratchy silhouette. Spacing and widths vary from glyph to glyph in a way that feels intentionally handmade rather than mechanically uniform.
Best suited to display use such as posters, headlines, album art, event flyers, and apparel graphics where texture and motion are desirable. It works especially well for punchy slogans, brand marks, and short bursts of copy that can take advantage of its high-energy rhythm.
The font reads as intense and improvised, with a gritty, street-level energy. Its aggressive texture and slanted momentum suggest urgency and attitude, leaning toward rebellious, poster-ready expression rather than quiet refinement.
The design appears intended to mimic fast, pressure-sensitive brush lettering captured with minimal cleanup. Its forward slant, torn edges, and variable stroke behavior prioritize expressive impact and a hand-made feel over strict regularity and long-form readability.
At text sizes the strong texture becomes a dominant feature, producing a dark, noisy color that suits short lines and emphatic phrases. The irregular outlines and tight counters can reduce clarity in smaller settings, while larger sizes reveal the brush grain and broken edges as a key stylistic asset.