Print Yobab 7 is a regular weight, very narrow, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, album art, book covers, quirky, playful, handmade, offbeat, grunge, handmade feel, added texture, quirky display, compact titles, scratchy, jagged, textured, condensed, bouncy.
A condensed, hand-drawn print face with tall proportions and a slightly irregular rhythm. Strokes show visible texture and rough edges, with subtle swelling and tapering that suggests a dry brush or marker; terminals often end in sharp, flicked points. Counters are generally open and simple, and the overall construction is clean enough to read while preserving uneven widths and small baseline wobbles. Capitals are narrow and vertical, while lowercase forms mix rounded bowls with angular joins, creating a lively, inconsistent-on-purpose color in text.
Best suited to display settings where a handmade texture and quirky tone are desirable—posters, cover titles, packaging callouts, social graphics, and event or music-related artwork. It can work for short blurbs or captions when you want personality, but its rough edges and narrow build are most effective in larger sizes.
The font reads as casual and characterful, with a mischievous, zine-like energy. Its scratchy texture and spiky terminals give it a slightly eerie, punk-leaning edge while still feeling approachable and humorous.
Likely designed to capture the immediacy of hand-lettered signage or brush/marker lettering in a compact, space-saving footprint. The goal appears to balance legibility with deliberate irregularity and texture to add attitude and human presence to headlines and branding accents.
Spacing appears fairly tight and compact, reinforcing the condensed feel; the texture becomes more noticeable at larger sizes where the ragged outlines and ink-like artifacts can function as a design feature. Numerals follow the same handmade logic, with simple silhouettes and slight wobble that keeps them from feeling mechanical.