Print Vumeh 7 is a regular weight, very narrow, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, packaging, headlines, logos, children’s media, playful, quirky, friendly, retro, casual, hand-lettered feel, compact headlines, friendly branding, casual emphasis, condensed, tall, rounded, soft, bouncy.
A tall, tightly set handwritten print with compact proportions and a distinctly condensed silhouette. Strokes are monolinear and slightly uneven, with softened terminals and subtle wobble that keeps the texture lively without becoming messy. Counters are narrow and vertical, and many curves feel gently inflated, giving letters a rubbery softness. Uppercase and lowercase share a consistent narrow rhythm, while figures and punctuation follow the same simplified, hand-drawn construction for an even overall color in text.
Well suited to short display settings where a narrow footprint is useful, such as posters, packaging fronts, labels, and headline treatments. It also fits branding and logo wordmarks that want a handmade, friendly voice. In longer passages it works best for brief blurbs, captions, or pull quotes where its lively texture can remain comfortable to read.
The tone is lighthearted and personable, with a quirky, vintage-leaning charm. Its narrow, springy shapes read as informal and approachable, suggesting handmade signage or playful editorial captions rather than formal typography.
The design appears intended to provide an informal, hand-lettered alternative to condensed display faces—maintaining consistent structure and legibility while preserving the charm of drawn strokes. It aims to deliver a compact, attention-getting rhythm with a warm, slightly whimsical personality.
The condensed build and tight internal spaces create a strong vertical cadence, especially in repeated stems (like m/n/u) and rounded forms (o/e). Distinctive, slightly idiosyncratic shapes—such as the angular joins in W and the simplified diagonals in K/X—reinforce the hand-rendered character while maintaining clear letter differentiation.