Solid Ushy 7 is a very bold, normal width, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, comics, album art, playful, handmade, rowdy, quirky, bold, attention-grabbing, handmade feel, humor, expressiveness, brushy, lumpy, blobby, ink-heavy, spiky.
A chunky, ink-heavy display face with irregular, hand-drawn contours and a forward-leaning stance. Strokes feel brush-like and pressed, producing lumpy terminals, occasional sharp wedges, and uneven curves that create a lively rhythm across words. Counters are small and frequently collapse into solid shapes, with several letters relying on silhouettes more than internal detail. Proportions are inconsistent by design—some glyphs swell or pinch unexpectedly—while the overall texture remains dense and high-impact.
Best suited for display settings where strong texture and personality are an asset: posters, covers, packaging callouts, comic-style titles, and expressive branding accents. It can work for short phrases or single-line headers at moderate-to-large sizes where its silhouette-driven forms have room to breathe.
The font reads as mischievous and energetic, with a scrappy DIY attitude that feels more like marker/brush lettering than engineered type. Its dense, blotty color and irregular motion give it a loud, comedic presence suited to attention-grabbing, informal messaging.
Likely designed to deliver maximum personality and impact through a deliberately rough, brushy construction and a dense, mostly solid interior structure. The goal appears to be a handmade, rebellious look that prioritizes expressive rhythm and visual punch over neutral readability.
Uppercase forms are especially expressive, with exaggerated hooks and angular cuts that amplify the sense of movement. In longer text the tight internal spaces and heavy black mass can reduce clarity, making the face feel best when used for punchy, short statements rather than extended reading.