Print Tulos 7 is a regular weight, normal width, medium contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, book covers, packaging, quotes, handmade, storybook, casual, warm, lively, handmade charm, friendly tone, display personality, narrative feel, brushlike, tapered, calligraphic, slanted terminals, open counters.
A hand-drawn print face with a brush-pen feel, showing gently tapered strokes and subtly uneven contours that keep the rhythm lively. Letterforms lean on simplified, calligraphic construction rather than strict geometry, with rounded joins, flared or pointed terminals, and occasional ink-like thick–thin shifts. Proportions are slightly irregular from glyph to glyph, and the lowercase shows compact bodies with tall ascenders and descenders, giving the text a bouncy vertical cadence. Numerals follow the same drawn logic with curving forms and soft, humanized modulation.
Well-suited to short-to-medium display settings such as headlines, pull quotes, posters, and packaging where a handmade voice is desirable. It can also work for book covers and story-driven branding when set with comfortable tracking and generous line spacing to let the lively contours breathe.
The overall tone is friendly and narrative, evoking handwritten headings and illustrated editorial work. Its informal consistency feels approachable and personal, with just enough brush character to suggest craft without becoming overly decorative.
The design appears intended to capture the charm of informal hand lettering in a dependable, repeatable font, balancing legibility with visible human touch. Its brushlike modulation and softened terminals suggest a goal of adding warmth and narrative character to display typography.
The texture comes primarily from controlled irregularity: stroke edges aren’t perfectly uniform, and terminals often finish with a slight flick or taper. In longer text, the face reads like neat hand lettering—best when you want personality and motion rather than typographic neutrality.