Print Oblat 7 is a regular weight, narrow, high contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, packaging, craft branding, children’s media, headlines, playful, hand-drawn, quirky, casual, retro, handmade feel, friendly tone, casual display, human warmth, monolinear, rounded, bouncy, textured, irregular.
A hand-drawn print style with mostly monoline strokes and subtly uneven outlines that create a lightly textured, inked look. Letterforms are compact and narrow with rounded terminals, simple construction, and a gentle wobble in verticals and curves that keeps the rhythm lively. Uppercase shapes are clean and open, while lowercase forms are small and neat, with single-storey a and g and straightforward counters. Numerals follow the same informal logic, with simplified, open shapes and occasional stroke wobble that reinforces the drawn character.
Well-suited for short to medium-length text where a casual, handmade voice is desired—such as posters, packaging, small-brand identity, invitations, social graphics, and children’s or educational materials. It works best at display and subhead sizes where the textured edges and informal construction can be appreciated without sacrificing clarity.
The font feels friendly and approachable, with a slightly quirky, sketchbook energy that reads as informal rather than polished. Its mild roughness and bouncy consistency evoke a retro classroom or handmade craft sensibility, giving text a human, conversational tone.
Likely designed to emulate quick, neat hand lettering with consistent proportions and an intentionally imperfect stroke edge. The aim appears to be a legible, friendly print face that adds warmth and personality to headings and casual copy without using connected script forms.
Texture appears as slight edge chatter and occasional internal stroke variation, suggesting a marker/pen-like origin. Spacing is generally even but intentionally imperfect, and the overall silhouette stays legible while retaining its handmade personality.