Print Vakev 7 is a regular weight, narrow, low contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: children’s books, classroom materials, packaging, posters, greeting cards, playful, friendly, casual, youthful, whimsical, human warmth, informal clarity, hand-drawn feel, approachable display, rounded, monoline, soft terminals, bouncy baseline, open counters.
A casual, hand-drawn print face with monoline strokes and generously rounded curves. The letterforms are mostly upright with a slightly bouncy rhythm, showing gentle irregularities in width and spacing that reinforce an authentic marker/pen feel. Terminals are soft and blunt rather than sharply cut, and shapes stay simple and open, keeping counters clear even in tighter forms. Capitals are tall and narrow with airy interior space, while lowercase is compact with short ascenders/descenders and a straightforward, single-storey construction where applicable.
Well suited to applications that benefit from a personable, hand-lettered voice—such as children’s and educational materials, playful branding, packaging, invitations, greeting cards, and display headlines. It can work for short passages and captions when a friendly, informal tone is desired.
The overall tone is warm and informal, like neat handwriting used for quick labels or friendly notes. Its slight wobble and soft geometry give it an approachable, cheerful personality without becoming overly messy or exaggerated.
The design appears intended to mimic clean, everyday handwriting in an unconnected print style, prioritizing approachability and clarity over strict typographic uniformity. Its controlled irregularities and rounded construction suggest a focus on human warmth and casual readability in display and light text settings.
Numerals and punctuation follow the same rounded, hand-rendered logic, with consistent stroke weight and a lightly uneven texture that reads as drawn rather than mechanically constructed. The font remains legible in continuous text, though the intentionally irregular spacing and lively shapes are most noticeable at larger sizes.