Print Inrub 7 is a very bold, narrow, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, packaging, branding, headlines, menus, playful, handmade, rustic, retro, whimsical, handmade feel, display impact, vintage flavor, lively rhythm, brushy, inked, textured, flared, chunky.
The letterforms have a brush-and-ink character with sharp tapers, swelling strokes, and visibly uneven contours that mimic pressure changes from a tool. Counters are compact and the silhouettes are chunky, with occasional flared terminals and small wedge-like serif hints that add a vintage flavor. Spacing and widths vary noticeably from glyph to glyph, creating an animated rhythm while remaining legible at display sizes.
This font works best for headlines, posters, packaging, and branding that want a handcrafted or vintage-leaning voice. It also suits menus, event flyers, album or book covers, and punchy pull quotes where texture and character are desirable. For long passages at small sizes, the heavy strokes and tight counters may feel dense, so it’s strongest in short-form, high-visibility applications.
This typeface feels lively and handcrafted, with a confident, playful tone that reads as friendly rather than formal. Its irregular ink-like edges give it a slightly rustic, old-timey warmth, making it well-suited to expressive, personality-forward messaging.
The design appears intended to emulate hand-drawn, inked lettering with strong stroke modulation and imperfect edges, prioritizing personality and visual impact over strict uniformity. Its construction suggests a display-first goal: to give headlines and short phrases an expressive, crafted presence.
The uppercase set feels especially sturdy and blocky, while the lowercase introduces more bounce and idiosyncratic shapes, reinforcing the hand-rendered look. Numerals follow the same inked, tapered logic, keeping the overall texture consistent across mixed-content settings.