Print Else 7 is a light, narrow, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: packaging, posters, children’s, craft branding, quotes, casual, handmade, quirky, playful, rustic, human touch, informality, approachability, tactile texture, sketchy, dry-brush, organic, textured, uneven baseline.
A hand-drawn print style with slender, slightly scratchy strokes and subtly fluctuating weight that reads like a felt-tip or dry-brush mark. Letterforms are mostly upright with gently irregular contours, soft corners, and occasional wobble in verticals and curves. Proportions are narrow and compact, with uneven sidebearings that create a lively rhythm; bowls and counters stay open enough for readability despite the textured edges. Uppercase forms feel simple and direct, while lowercase shows modest quirks (notably in letters like a, g, y, and k) that reinforce the handmade character. Numerals are similarly spare and informal, matching the alphabet’s stroke behavior and spacing.
Well suited to packaging, café menus, craft and handmade branding, informal posters, and social graphics where a personable, analog look is desired. It also works for short editorial callouts, headings, and pull quotes, and can support brief blocks of text when a casual, sketch-like texture is acceptable.
The overall tone is friendly and imperfect in an intentional way, suggesting personal notes, crafty labeling, and an easygoing, human presence. Its roughened stroke texture and slightly uneven alignment give it a warm, tactile feel rather than a polished or corporate voice.
Designed to mimic quick, natural hand lettering with an uncomplicated printed construction, prioritizing warmth and authenticity over geometric precision. The intent appears to be an approachable, everyday script-like print that keeps readability while preserving the irregularities of a real pen stroke.
At text sizes the irregular spacing and textured stroke edges become part of the charm, while larger sizes emphasize the drawn-by-hand details and subtle inconsistencies between shapes. The font maintains enough structural consistency to set short passages, but it looks most convincing when allowed to feel informal and unforced.