Print Ulmoy 7 is a light, very narrow, medium contrast, italic, very short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, greeting cards, packaging, social media, playful, casual, airy, whimsical, friendly, hand-lettered feel, approachability, informal display, compact headlines, monoline, spindly, loopy, bouncy, tall.
A slender, handwritten print with a gently right-leaning posture and a lively, uneven rhythm. Strokes read as pen-like and mostly monoline, with occasional thickened entries and tapered terminals that suggest quick, natural pressure changes. Proportions are tall and condensed, with generous ascenders/descenders and compact lowercase bodies, producing plenty of white space between strokes. Forms mix simple printed construction with occasional loops and soft curves, and spacing varies slightly from glyph to glyph, reinforcing a human, drawn texture.
Works best for short to medium text where personality matters—headlines, pull quotes, packaging callouts, greeting cards, and social graphics. The condensed, airy construction helps fit longer phrases in tight spaces, while the handwritten irregularity is more effective at display sizes than dense body copy.
The overall tone is informal and personable, with a light, breezy energy. Its narrow, upright-to-leaning shapes and looping details feel whimsical and conversational rather than formal or authoritative.
Designed to mimic quick, neat hand lettering with an expressive, lightly calligraphic touch. The goal appears to be approachable display typography that feels personal and spontaneous while staying readable across mixed-case settings.
Capitals tend to be more expressive and calligraphic in gesture, while lowercase stays simpler and more note-like, creating a distinctive cap/lowercase contrast in texture. Numerals follow the same handwritten logic with open curves and minimal ornament, staying legible while retaining the casual, sketchy cadence.