Print Samin 7 is a very bold, normal width, very high contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, sports branding, packaging, apparel, energetic, sporty, retro, expressive, bold, impact, motion, handmade feel, headline display, sign-painting look, brushy, slanted, swashy, roughened, dynamic.
A slanted brush-script display face with heavy, pressure-shaped strokes and sharp contrast between thick fills and thin, hairline flicks. Letterforms are built from compact, wedge-like strokes with pointed terminals and occasional looped or hooked entry/exit strokes, creating a fast, forward rhythm. The outlines show a deliberately rough, ink-brush texture and small internal breaks or notches that mimic dry-brush drag. Curves are broad and rounded while joins remain tight, giving the alphabet a punchy, compact silhouette and uneven, hand-driven spacing.
Best suited for short, high-impact settings such as posters, cover titles, sports-themed branding, packaging labels, and apparel graphics. It works especially well when set large, where the dry-brush texture and tapered terminals remain clear and intentional, and where the strong slant can drive a dynamic typographic composition.
The overall tone is loud and kinetic, like hand-painted signage or energetic headline lettering. Its aggressive slant and brush texture read as confident and attention-grabbing, with a slightly nostalgic feel reminiscent of classic sports graphics and mid-century advertising scripts.
This design appears intended to capture the immediacy of brush lettering while maintaining consistent, repeatable shapes for display typography. The pronounced slant, punchy proportions, and textured stroke edges suggest a focus on speed, impact, and a hand-made sign-painting aesthetic.
Capitals tend to be dominant and more flourished than the lowercase, with several letters using dramatic hooks or underswashes that add movement in words. Numerals match the same brush logic, with angled strokes and tapered ends that keep the set visually consistent in headings.