Print Gukip 7 is a light, narrow, medium contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, book covers, posters, packaging, greeting cards, quirky, folksy, playful, hand-drawn, whimsical, handmade texture, expressive display, casual voice, storybook tone, quirky character, spiky, angular, wiry, irregular, textured.
A wiry, hand-drawn print with narrow proportions and a lively, uneven baseline. Strokes look pen- or brush-like with slight wavering and modest contrast, producing a textured edge rather than a mechanically smooth outline. Letterforms lean toward angular construction with occasional sharp terminals, long ascenders, and compact counters; round shapes (like O and Q) appear slightly oval and irregular. Spacing and widths vary noticeably from glyph to glyph, reinforcing an informal rhythm and a handmade cadence in both the alphabet grid and the paragraph sample.
Best suited to short to medium text where personality matters—titles, headers, pull quotes, and display lines for book covers, posters, and packaging. It can also work in smaller bursts for labels or UI accents when a handmade, informal voice is desired, though the irregular rhythm favors display use over dense body copy.
The overall tone is quirky and storybook-like, with a slightly spooky or gothic edge created by pointed joins and tall, wiry stems. It reads as playful and expressive rather than polished, suggesting hand lettering for imaginative, characterful messaging.
The design appears intended to capture the immediacy of hand lettering while staying legible in sentence settings, balancing sketch-like texture with recognizable print structures. Its narrow, wiry build and pointed details suggest a goal of adding character and a touch of theatrical flair without fully abandoning readability.
Capitals have a distinctive, slightly calligraphic presence with idiosyncratic details (notably in letters like Q, J, and W), while lowercase remains simple and readable but intentionally inconsistent. Numerals follow the same hand-drawn logic, with narrow forms and uneven curves that keep them visually integrated with the letters.