Print Ufkif 7 is a bold, very narrow, high contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, invitations, social media, playful, friendly, quirky, handmade, bouncy, handmade charm, playful display, casual warmth, expressive texture, brushy, rounded, casual, expressive, organic.
A lively hand-drawn print style with compact, tall proportions and an energetic rhythm. Strokes show clear pressure variation, with tapered entry/exit terminals and occasional blob-like thickening that feels brush- or marker-driven. Counters are generally open and rounded, and curves lean slightly irregular in a deliberate, human way rather than geometric precision. Capitals are narrow and upright with simplified structure, while the lowercase mixes simple printed forms with a few loopier, more cursive-like constructions (notably in letters such as a, d, g, y), creating a varied, handwritten texture across words. Numerals are narrow and slightly quirky, matching the same stroke modulation and soft terminal treatment.
Works best for short to medium text where personality matters—posters, headlines, packaging, labels, invitations, greeting cards, and social media graphics. It can also suit branding for casual, handmade, or youth-oriented projects where a friendly handwritten voice is desired.
The overall tone is warm, informal, and upbeat, with a personable “written by hand” charm. Its narrow, punchy shapes and lively stroke contrast give it a whimsical, crafty character that feels approachable and lighthearted rather than formal or corporate.
Likely designed to deliver a compact, attention-grabbing handwritten look that stays readable while preserving the spontaneity of pen/brush movement. The goal appears to be an informal print face with enough stroke variation and irregularity to feel genuinely human, while maintaining consistent upright structure for versatile display use.
Word shapes are animated by alternating thick and thin strokes and by slightly uneven widths between glyphs, which adds charm but can make dense text feel busy. The dot shapes and small hooks/curves on some terminals contribute to a playful, illustrative finish, and the uppercase-to-lowercase relationship feels intentionally eclectic rather than strictly systematized.