Print Febe 7 is a bold, narrow, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, packaging, headlines, social media, event promos, energetic, casual, expressive, playful, rugged, hand-painted feel, high impact, informal voice, dynamic motion, brushy, textured, dry stroke, slanted, compact.
A compact, right-slanted brush style with thick, pressure-driven strokes and visible texture along edges, suggesting a dry marker or brush. Letterforms are mostly unconnected with simplified constructions and brisk, tapered terminals, creating a lively handwritten rhythm. Counters tend to be tight and rounded, the baseline is slightly lively, and overall spacing is irregular in a natural way that reinforces an informal, hand-drawn feel. Numerals match the same gestural weight and lean, with bold, quick shapes and occasional wedge-like endings.
Well-suited for display applications where a hand-painted or marker-made impression is desirable: posters, packaging callouts, social graphics, event promotions, and casual branding accents. It performs best in short to medium bursts of text where texture and rhythm can be appreciated without demanding long-form reading comfort.
The font conveys an upbeat, human, on-the-fly tone—confident and a little rough around the edges. Its textured stroke and forward slant read as energetic and approachable, more like hand-lettered signage than polished typography.
Likely designed to capture fast, expressive hand-lettering with a bold, brushy texture and a forward-leaning stance. The goal appears to be high-impact informality—delivering a handmade look that feels spontaneous and energetic while remaining legible in typical display use.
The condensed proportions and heavy color create strong impact at display sizes, while the textured outlines and uneven stroke finish can become more noticeable in smaller settings. Uppercase has a punchy, poster-like presence; lowercase keeps a casual, handwritten cadence that works well for short lines and headlines.