Print Suma 7 is a bold, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, packaging, headlines, children’s, branding, friendly, playful, chunky, warm, retro, approachability, impact, handmade feel, casual tone, display clarity, rounded, soft terminals, bouncy baseline, compact counters, ink-like.
A heavy, rounded print style with soft, blunted terminals and gently swelling strokes that mimic a marker or brush without fully connecting letters. Curves are generous and slightly squarish in places, giving bowls and counters a compact, sturdy feel. The rhythm is lively and informal, with subtle irregularities in stroke shaping and a slightly bouncy sense of spacing; capitals read broad and stable while lowercase stays compact with simple, single-storey forms where applicable. Numerals are similarly plump and friendly, keeping consistent stroke weight and rounded corners for a cohesive texture in text.
Well suited to posters, packaging, and brand marks that want a warm, informal voice. It performs strongly in headlines, labels, and callouts where its dense weight and rounded forms can carry presence without feeling aggressive. It can also work for short paragraphs in friendly editorial contexts, especially when ample line spacing is available.
The overall tone is approachable and upbeat, with a hand-drawn friendliness that feels casual and human. Its chunky, softened shapes suggest a retro-leaning, kid-friendly energy that remains clear and readable while still expressing personality.
The design appears intended to capture the immediacy of hand-rendered print lettering while maintaining a consistent, repeatable structure for typesetting. Its softened geometry and chunky strokes prioritize approachability and visual impact over strict, mechanical precision.
Distinctive rounded joins and softened corners help avoid sharpness at large sizes, creating a dark, even color on the page. The wide, open shapes in letters like O/C/G and the sturdy verticals make it especially confident in headlines and short bursts of copy.