Print Gogif 7 is a very bold, very narrow, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, sportswear, logos, packaging, energetic, retro, punchy, playful, sporty, impact, motion, handmade, display, branding, slanted, condensed, brushy, angular, high-impact.
A condensed, strongly slanted display face with brush-like strokes and tapered terminals. Forms are built from assertive, slightly irregular verticals and sharp diagonals, with a lively handwritten rhythm that keeps counters tight and silhouettes tall. Stroke endings often flick or wedge, and curves feel pulled forward, creating a fast, forward-leaning texture. Overall spacing reads compact and dense, emphasizing vertical momentum more than roundness.
Works best for short, high-impact copy such as posters, event titles, apparel graphics, and bold packaging callouts. The narrow, forward-leaning forms can fit longer words into tight widths while still reading as display. It’s less suited to long passages, but excels where expressive emphasis and motion are desired.
The font conveys speed and urgency with a bold, kinetic swagger. Its hand-drawn character and narrow, leaning stance give it a retro advertising and sports-poster attitude—confident, loud, and attention-seeking rather than refined. The tone is informal and expressive, suited to messages that should feel active and a bit gritty.
Likely designed to mimic a quick, confident hand-painted or marker-lettered sign style in a condensed, italicized display format. The goal appears to be maximum impact and momentum—letters that feel drawn in one energetic pass, optimized for branding and headline use rather than quiet text reading.
Uppercase and lowercase share a consistent forward slant and compressed proportions, helping mixed-case settings maintain a uniform stripe-like color. Numerals follow the same tall, narrow build, keeping the overall texture cohesive in headline settings. The strongest impression comes at larger sizes, where the tapering and brush modulation are most visible.