Print Fibur 7 is a bold, narrow, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, stickers, social media, grungy, playful, handmade, rough, casual, handmade feel, high impact, diy texture, informal tone, brushy, textured, chunky, irregular, expressive.
This font uses thick, brush-like strokes with visibly rough edges, producing a textured silhouette and uneven ink spread. Letterforms are generally compact and slightly condensed, with simplified construction and rounded turns that keep counters fairly open despite the heavy weight. Stroke endings are often blunt or frayed, and widths vary from glyph to glyph, creating an organic rhythm rather than strict typographic regularity. Overall spacing feels loose and lively, with small inconsistencies in baseline alignment and stroke modulation that reinforce the hand-drawn character.
Best suited for display settings such as posters, event titles, packaging callouts, stickers, and social graphics where a bold, handmade look is desirable. It can also work for short, punchy captions or section headers, but the textured strokes make it less ideal for long-form reading at small sizes.
The overall tone is informal and energetic, with a gritty, street-level immediacy that reads as handmade rather than polished. The rough brush texture gives it a rebellious, DIY feel, while the rounded shapes keep it approachable and fun instead of aggressive.
The design appears intended to mimic quick, confident brush lettering with deliberate roughness, prioritizing personality and impact over typographic refinement. Its consistent texture and lively inconsistencies suggest a goal of conveying a DIY, hand-printed feel for attention-grabbing display typography.
At larger sizes the edge texture and dry-brush artifacts become a defining feature; at smaller sizes those details can visually fill in, so the style reads best when given enough scale and contrast. Numerals share the same rugged treatment, and the uppercase set feels especially strong and poster-like compared to the more compact lowercase.