Print Huriz 7 is a bold, normal width, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, comics, packaging, event flyers, playful, handmade, quirky, lively, rugged, expressiveness, informality, attention, texture, attitude, angular, chiseled, jittery, irregular, chunky.
A chunky, hand-drawn print face with angular, chisel-like strokes and slightly uneven contours. Letterforms show noticeable variation in width and stance, with a gentle rightward slant and a bouncy baseline rhythm that keeps lines feeling animated rather than rigid. Terminals are blunt and broken-looking, as if cut with a marker or brush at changing angles, creating crisp corners and faceted curves (especially in round letters and numerals). Counters are generally open and simplified, prioritizing silhouette clarity over smooth geometry, and the overall texture reads dense and energetic at display sizes.
Best suited for display typography such as posters, headlines, stickers, and bold callouts where an energetic, hand-made feel is desired. It can also work well for playful packaging, event flyers, and short social graphics, especially where a rough, angular texture reinforces a casual or rebellious tone.
The tone is informal and expressive, with a mischievous, comic edge that feels hand-made and immediate. Its rough-cut angles and uneven timing suggest spontaneity and attitude—more street-poster and zine than polished branding.
The design appears intended to capture an informal hand-rendered look with deliberately imperfect geometry and punchy silhouettes, creating a distinctive, attention-grabbing voice for display settings. Its angled cuts and variable rhythm emphasize personality and movement over typographic neutrality.
In text, the irregular stroke edges and shifting widths create a strong, gritty texture that becomes part of the voice; this works best when the font is allowed to be large enough for the deliberate roughness to read as character rather than noise. The numerals match the same faceted, cutout construction, helping headlines and short callouts stay stylistically consistent.