Print Dimoh 7 is a light, narrow, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, book covers, packaging, branding, quirky, hand-drawn, playful, whimsical, folky, handwritten feel, casual charm, expressive display, human texture, angular, sketchy, spiky, irregular, bouncy.
A hand-drawn, monoline style with slightly angular construction and visibly uneven stroke edges, as if made with a felt-tip or quick pen. Letterforms are simplified and open, with modest rounding at some joins but frequent sharp corners and tapered terminals. Proportions vary from glyph to glyph, producing a lively rhythm; curves (C, O, S) are slightly faceted, and verticals often lean subtly or wobble. Uppercase forms are tall and narrow with irregular crossbars, while lowercase stays compact with single-story a and g, short ascenders, and straightforward, unlooped forms.
Best suited to short-to-medium display settings where personality is the priority: posters, titles, packaging callouts, and brand accents for playful or crafty themes. It can work for brief body copy in larger sizes, especially when a casual, handwritten feel is desired, but the uneven rhythm is most effective in headings and spot text.
The overall tone feels casual and mischievous, with a homemade, notebook-like character that reads as friendly rather than formal. Its slightly jagged outlines and uneven pacing give it an expressive, indie craft sensibility—more personal and spontaneous than polished.
Designed to emulate informal hand lettering with a quick, slightly scratchy pen touch—prioritizing charm, motion, and individuality over strict typographic regularity. The consistent monoline weight and simplified shapes suggest an intention for versatile display use while retaining a distinctly human, drawn-on-paper character.
At text sizes the irregular spacing and varied letter widths become part of the texture, creating an intentionally imperfect color. Numerals follow the same hand-rendered logic, with narrow shapes and occasional angular bends that match the alphabet’s faceted curves.