Print Dinat 6 is a very light, narrow, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, album art, packaging, social graphics, casual, sketchy, quirky, youthful, hand-drawn, handmade feel, casual display, personal voice, diy texture, angular, monoline, jagged, spiky, loose.
A hand-drawn, print-style alphabet built from quick, slightly jittery strokes with mostly monoline weight and sharp, angular turns. Forms are open and simplified, with uneven baselines and a casual rightward slant that varies from letter to letter. Counters are often narrow or diamond-like (notably in O/0), curves are frequently faceted into straight segments, and terminals tend to be pointed or abruptly cut. Overall spacing and widths are irregular, emphasizing an improvised, marker-on-paper construction rather than a rigid geometric system.
Best suited to display settings where a handmade voice is desirable—posters, short headlines, labels, zines, and social graphics. It can also work for branding accents or packaging that benefits from a casual, DIY tone, while longer text may feel busy due to the irregular rhythm and angular detailing.
The font reads as informal and spirited, with a sketchbook energy that feels spontaneous and personal. Its angular strokes and uneven rhythm give it a slightly edgy, playful character—more indie and handmade than polished or corporate.
The design intention appears to be capturing quick handwritten printing with a distinctive faceted, angular flavor—prioritizing personality and immediacy over typographic uniformity. It aims to look like spontaneous lettering made with a fine pen or marker, maintaining legibility while preserving natural variation.
Distinctive polygonal/diamond round shapes and sharp joins are a recurring motif across capitals, lowercase, and numerals. The numerals follow the same hand-built logic as the letters, with simplified silhouettes and occasional wobble in stroke direction that reinforces the drawn aesthetic.