Print Gubot 7 is a light, narrow, medium contrast, reverse italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: packaging, posters, headlines, social media, quotes, casual, friendly, playful, hand-drawn, approachable, human warmth, informal tone, everyday notes, approachability, monolinear, loose, lively, organic, irregular.
A casual hand-drawn print with slim, slightly wobbly strokes and a gently right-leaning rhythm. Letterforms are unconnected and built from quick, confident pen-like movements, with rounded turns, soft terminals, and occasional tapering at stroke ends. Proportions are loosely consistent but intentionally irregular, giving the alphabet a human cadence; counters stay fairly open, and ascenders/descenders are long enough to add vertical animation. The numerals follow the same informal construction, with simple, readable shapes and minor inconsistencies that reinforce the hand-rendered character.
Well-suited to short, expressive copy where a human voice is desirable—packaging callouts, posters, social graphics, invitations, classroom materials, and quote treatments. It can also work for headings and subheads in editorial or branding contexts that benefit from an informal, hand-written feel.
The overall tone feels friendly and conversational, like neat marker notes or informal journaling. Its slight slant and lively stroke variation add energy without becoming chaotic, making it feel personable and relaxed rather than formal or technical.
The design appears intended to mimic quick, natural handwriting in an unconnected print style—prioritizing warmth and spontaneity over strict geometric consistency. Its controlled looseness suggests a goal of remaining readable while still clearly looking hand-drawn.
Capital forms are simple and legible with minimal ornament, while lowercase letters keep a handwritten bounce and varied widths that create a natural, uneven texture in paragraphs. The sample text shows comfortable word recognition at display and short-text sizes, with an intentionally imperfect baseline and spacing that reads as authentic rather than mechanically regularized.