Print Elte 7 is a light, narrow, low contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, packaging, book covers, children’s content, greeting cards, hand-drawn, playful, quirky, casual, storybook, human touch, casual display, whimsy, approachability, wiry, spindly, slightly rough, bouncy, rounded.
A hand-drawn print style with thin, wiry strokes and gently irregular outlines that mimic marker or pen on paper. Letterforms are mostly upright with a slightly bouncy baseline and uneven stroke endings, producing a natural, sketched texture. Counters are generally open and rounded, while key shapes (like the bowl letters and the numerals) show small inconsistencies in curvature and terminal shapes that reinforce the handmade rhythm. Spacing is moderately loose and the overall silhouette feels narrow and tall, with compact lowercase proportions relative to ascenders and capitals.
Works best where a handmade voice is desirable: posters and flyers, packaging accents, book covers, classroom materials, and greeting cards. It’s especially suitable for short-to-medium text like titles, pull quotes, or labels where the irregular, drawn texture can be appreciated without becoming visually busy.
The font reads informal and friendly, with a quirky, personal tone that feels like notes in a margin or hand-lettering in a children’s book. Its gentle wobble and imperfect edges add warmth and approachability rather than precision, lending a lightly whimsical character to headings and short phrases.
The design appears intended to capture the feel of quickly hand-printed lettering—legible, upright, and lightly imperfect—so layouts gain a human, personal touch. Its consistency suggests deliberate drawing rather than true handwriting, aiming for charm and readability in display and informal editorial applications.
Capital forms are simple and readable, with a few notably idiosyncratic details (such as rounded bowls, slightly uneven joins, and occasional taper-like stroke ends) that add charm without turning into heavy distortion. Numerals follow the same hand-rendered logic, keeping a consistent, casual texture across letters and figures.