Print Ihbif 7 is a bold, narrow, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, packaging, menus, signage, friendly, energetic, casual, lively, playful, informal display, human touch, fast emphasis, casual branding, headline punch, brushy, rounded terminals, tapered strokes, signpaint feel, hand-drawn.
The letterforms are a right-leaning, brush-pen style with rounded terminals and subtly tapered strokes that suggest pressure and speed. Forms are compact with lively curves and a steady forward slant, while widths vary enough to keep a natural handwritten cadence. Counters stay relatively open for a script-like print face, and the overall texture is dark and continuous-looking without actual connections between letters.
This font works well for headlines, posters, packaging, café or menu branding, social graphics, and casual editorial callouts where a handwritten voice is desired. It can also suit quotes, invitations with an informal tone, and signage-style applications that benefit from a bold brush texture. For long paragraphs or very small sizes, the heavy texture and slant may be better used as an accent rather than body copy.
This font gives off an energetic, personable tone with a casual confidence. The slanted, brushy rhythm feels friendly and expressive rather than formal, with a hint of retro sign-painting charm. It reads as upbeat and approachable, suited to messaging that wants warmth and momentum.
The design appears intended to mimic quick, confident brush lettering while staying unconnected for easier setting in words and short phrases. Its strong slant and tapered strokes prioritize expressive impact and a handmade feel over strict regularity. The consistent stroke energy suggests it was drawn to look natural in display sizes and promotional copy.
Caps are notably dynamic and gestural, with several forms featuring looped or swooping strokes that reinforce a brush-written look. Numerals follow the same handwritten logic, leaning and curving with consistent stroke weight and soft terminals, maintaining the font’s cohesive, informal rhythm across letters and figures.