Print Fuliv 7 is a very bold, narrow, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Battle Damaged' and 'Whatchamacallit' by Comicraft and 'Popular Vote' by Hanoded (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: posters, headlines, stickers, packaging, social media, energetic, rugged, playful, streetwise, retro, handmade impact, brush texture, display emphasis, bold personality, brushed, rough-edged, slanted, chunky, expressive.
This font uses chunky, heavily filled letterforms with a pronounced rightward slant and a hand-painted rhythm. Strokes are broad and largely uniform, with intentionally uneven edges, occasional nicks, and tapering that suggests a brush or marker dragged quickly across the page. Counters are compact and sometimes irregular, terminals are blunt, and curves feel slightly faceted rather than perfectly smooth. The overall texture reads bold and inky, with lively variation in stroke endings and internal shapes across the alphabet and numerals.
Best suited to display settings such as posters, attention-grabbing headlines, stickers, and bold packaging callouts where a hand-made impact is desirable. It can also work well for social graphics and event promotions that need an energetic, brush-lettered voice. For longer paragraphs, it’s more effective as an accent font rather than the primary reading face.
The tone is loud, punchy, and informal, like a hand-lettered headline made in one confident pass. Its roughness and forward lean give it momentum and attitude, balancing playful charm with a gritty, street-poster immediacy. The result feels expressive and spontaneous rather than polished or corporate.
The design appears intended to capture the immediacy of fast brush lettering—bold, slanted forms with deliberately rough contours that preserve the feel of a human hand. It prioritizes punchy presence and personality over geometric precision, aiming for high-impact display use with a spirited, informal voice.
At text sizes the texture becomes a defining feature, with tight counters and ragged edges contributing to a strong dark color on the page. The slant and irregularities make it most comfortable in short bursts, where the energetic brush character can lead without demanding extended reading.