Print Ihgon 7 is a bold, normal width, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, packaging, headlines, logos, social media, brushed, energetic, casual, playful, expressive, handwritten feel, brush energy, personal tone, display impact, swashy, calligraphic, slanted, rounded, inked.
A lively, brush-drawn script with a consistent rightward slant and soft, rounded stroke endings. The forms show clear pen-pressure modulation, with fuller downstrokes and lighter connecting or exit strokes, creating an inked, slightly swashy silhouette. Letter widths vary noticeably, giving the line a hand-set rhythm; counters are compact and many letters feature extended entry/exit terminals. Overall spacing reads loose and organic, with occasional overlaps suggested in the sample text by long descenders and sweeping strokes.
This style performs best in short to medium display settings where its brush texture and slanted rhythm can read clearly—posters, cover lines, packaging callouts, branding marks, and social media graphics. It can work for short blurbs or pull quotes at comfortable sizes, but dense paragraphs may feel busy due to the variable widths and prominent terminals.
The font conveys an informal, upbeat tone with a spontaneous handwritten feel. Its energetic brush texture and rhythmic slant suggest friendliness and motion, leaning more expressive than restrained. The swash-like terminals add a touch of flair that feels personal and slightly theatrical without becoming overly ornate.
The design appears intended to mimic quick, confident brush lettering in a reusable digital form—prioritizing expressive stroke movement, pressure-driven contrast, and a natural handwritten cadence. The aim is a personable, attention-grabbing voice suitable for informal display typography.
Uppercase characters are particularly gestural, often built from broad strokes with prominent hooks and angled crossbars, while lowercase stays compact with pronounced descenders (notably in g, j, y). Numerals follow the same brush logic and appear designed for display readability rather than strict tabular uniformity.