Print Filab 7 is a very bold, very narrow, high contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, album art, event flyers, playful, grungy, handmade, quirky, punk, handmade texture, display impact, diy character, tactile feel, brushy, rough-edged, inked, irregular, textured.
This font uses chunky, hand-drawn letterforms with visibly uneven stroke edges and patchy ink texture that creates a stamped/painted look. Strokes are largely monoline in feel but break up at the contours, producing ragged terminals and small notches that keep the silhouette lively. Proportions are condensed and compact, with tight bowls and narrow counters; curves are slightly wobbly and corners soften into brush-like rounding rather than crisp geometry. Overall rhythm is intentionally inconsistent, with small variations in width and stroke buildup that read as natural hand pressure rather than mechanical repetition.
It performs best in short, bold statements such as posters, flyers, social graphics, and punchy headlines where the rough texture can read clearly. The hand-inked character also suits packaging accents, merch, album artwork, and themed display applications that benefit from a DIY, tactile feel. Use generous size and spacing when setting longer lines to maintain clarity.
The tone is energetic and informal, with a gritty DIY attitude that feels like poster paint, marker, or dry-brush lettering. It suggests spontaneity and humor, leaning toward an indie, zine-like character rather than polished branding. The texture adds a raw, street-ready edge that can feel both playful and slightly rebellious.
The design appears intended to mimic quick, assertive hand lettering with a dry-brush or ink-stamped texture—favoring personality and impact over uniformity. Its condensed, heavy shapes aim to grab attention while the irregular edges preserve an authentic, handmade surface.
Capitals have a tall, compact presence with simple construction and strong silhouettes, while lowercase maintains the same rough texture and compressed stance for consistent color in text. Numerals match the hand-rendered texture and weight, keeping the set cohesive for display use. The heavy inked shapes can close up at small sizes, so the texture and counters are most legible when given room.