Print Yida 6 is a regular weight, very narrow, high contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, branding, packaging, music promos, energetic, expressive, urban, raw, handmade, handmade impact, motion, grit, informal display, brushy, textured, slanted, spiky, condensed.
A condensed, right-slanted brush style with sharp, tapered terminals and pronounced thick–thin modulation. Strokes show dry-brush texture and occasional ink breakup, giving edges a slightly ragged, hand-painted finish. Letterforms are mostly unconnected with quick, gestural construction and compact spacing; ascenders and descenders are long and narrow, reinforcing a vertical, punchy rhythm. Numerals and capitals follow the same lively brush logic, mixing broad swells with needle-like entry/exit strokes.
Best suited for short-to-medium display settings where texture and motion are assets: posters, event flyers, album/playlist artwork, punchy branding, and packaging callouts. It can work for pull quotes or short passages at larger sizes, but the tight, brushy details favor clear contrast and ample size for readability.
The overall tone feels fast, bold, and streetwise—like a marker or brush sign pulled in one confident pass. Its rough texture and angular flicks add urgency and attitude, reading as informal, dynamic, and attention-seeking rather than refined or quiet.
The design appears intended to capture the immediacy of hand-painted lettering—condensed for impact, slanted for momentum, and textured for authenticity—providing a bold, human alternative to clean display italics in energetic visual systems.
Consistency comes from repeated stroke behavior: hooked starts, tapered finishes, and intermittent roughness that suggests bristle drag. Some glyphs lean toward simplified, sign-like shapes (notably several uppercase forms), while the lowercase maintains a more cursive, handwritten cadence, creating a lively mixed-mode feel in text.