Print Wokus 7 is a light, narrow, medium contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, horror titles, halloween, book covers, album art, spooky, scratchy, whimsical, eerie, playful, handmade texture, spooky display, informal voice, expressive headings, sketch aesthetic, inked, sketchy, jagged, uneven, hand-drawn.
A hand-drawn print face with thin, slightly wiry strokes and frequent pen-lift artifacts that create a scratchy outline-and-fill feel in places. Letterforms are generally upright with narrow proportions and irregular widths, and the baseline and cap heights show subtle wobble that reinforces the handmade rhythm. Curves are loosely controlled, counters are small to moderate, and terminals often taper or hook as if drawn quickly with a fine brush pen or ink marker. Overall spacing is uneven in an intentional way, favoring texture and character over typographic regularity.
Best suited to display settings where a hand-inked, slightly spooky texture is an asset: posters, title cards, book covers, album art, and themed packaging. It can also work for short UI headings or pull quotes when you want an informal, sketchy voice, but it will be most effective at larger sizes where the rough stroke detail remains clear.
The font conveys an eerie, whimsical tone—like notes in a sketchbook, a storybook spell, or a lightly “haunted” handwritten title. Its jittery edges and slightly prickly shapes read as playful-but-unnerving, making it feel at home in seasonal and imaginative contexts.
The design appears intended to emulate quick, expressive handwriting with a deliberately rough edge, prioritizing personality and atmospheric texture. Its narrow, upright forms and lively irregularity aim to create an illustrative, story-driven feel rather than a polished, neutral text texture.
In longer lines the texture becomes a visible pattern, with occasional heavier spots and doubled strokes that suggest retracing. The numeral set matches the same scratchy, hand-inked personality, and capitals can feel more decorative and spiky than the lowercase, increasing the expressive contrast between cases.