Print Wolab 7 is a regular weight, very narrow, high contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, book covers, packaging, kids branding, whimsical, hand-drawn, storybook, quirky, playful, handmade charm, playful display, quirky character, compact headlines, monoline feel, wiry, tall, spiky, bouncy baseline.
A tall, condensed hand-drawn print with wiry strokes and a lightly sketched, double-line/ink-trace texture that creates an outlined look in many letters. Stems are long and narrow with small counters, while bowls and terminals stay compact, giving the face a vertical, slightly elastic rhythm. Curves are clean but not mechanically perfect, with subtle wobble and occasional sharp turns; some terminals taper into small hooks or flicks. Spacing is airy and uneven in a natural way, and uppercase and lowercase share a consistent narrow footprint with occasional wider characters for visual variety.
Works well for headlines, short display copy, and titles where a handmade, whimsical voice is desired—such as posters, book covers, playful packaging, and informal branding. It can also add personality to pull quotes or labels when set with generous tracking and line spacing.
The overall tone is playful and quirky, with a storybook, handmade charm. The slightly scratchy outline effect and tall proportions add a mischievous, offbeat personality that feels friendly rather than formal. It reads as imaginative and characterful, suited to lighthearted or expressive messaging.
The design appears intended to mimic quick ink or marker lettering with a lightly outlined trace, prioritizing personality and vertical elegance over strict geometric precision. Its narrow, tall build suggests an aim for expressive display text that can fit impactful words into tighter horizontal space while retaining a hand-crafted feel.
The numeral set follows the same tall, narrow construction and retains the hand-drawn irregularities, helping text and numbers feel unified. The font maintains legibility in short phrases, but the thin, sketched strokes and condensed forms suggest it will feel most comfortable at display sizes rather than dense body copy.