Print Hekaz 7 is a very bold, normal width, medium contrast, reverse italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, kids branding, packaging, event flyers, headlines, playful, whimsical, cheerful, casual, retro, hand-drawn charm, display impact, approachability, humor, energy, chunky, rounded, bouncy, cartoonish, soft terminals.
This font features chunky, hand-drawn letterforms with rounded contours and a lively right-leaning stance. Strokes are heavy and smooth with gently swelling curves and blunt, softened terminals, giving the shapes a cut-out, brushy feel rather than a rigid geometric construction. Proportions are intentionally irregular: bowls vary in size, counters are often small and teardrop-like, and widths shift noticeably between glyphs, creating an animated rhythm across words. The lowercase shows a compact, simplified structure with single-storey forms and playful hooks, while the numerals follow the same informal, rounded build for a cohesive texture.
It works best for display typography where personality is the goal—posters, playful branding, packaging, stickers, and short headlines or callouts. The strong silhouettes hold up well for simple signage and social graphics, especially when set with comfortable spacing to keep the letterforms from visually clumping.
The overall tone is friendly and humorous, like a hand-lettered headline meant to feel approachable and fun. Its buoyant slant and wobbly spacing add a sense of motion and spontaneity, evoking a lighthearted, slightly retro cartoon energy.
The design appears intended to mimic casual, hand-drawn print lettering with a bold marker/brush presence, prioritizing charm and expressiveness over strict uniformity. Its deliberate irregularity and buoyant slant aim to create an upbeat, approachable voice that stands out quickly in display contexts.
In longer lines, the dense stroke weight and small counters can make the texture feel dark, so generous tracking and line spacing help preserve clarity. The distinctive, uneven silhouettes give strong character at display sizes, while very small sizes may lose interior detail in letters with tighter apertures.