Print Toti 7 is a regular weight, wide, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: children’s books, posters, packaging, greeting cards, event flyers, playful, quirky, handmade, friendly, casual, handmade charm, expressive display, casual warmth, playful emphasis, brushy, rounded, bouncy, loopy, wonky.
A bold, hand-drawn print style with visibly brush-like stroke edges and slightly irregular outlines. Letterforms are generally rounded with soft corners, while terminals often flare or blob as if made with a marker or loaded brush. Proportions are loose and variable: some capitals are compact and squat while others open wide, and the lowercase shows uneven widths and lively spacing. The overall rhythm is energetic rather than strictly aligned, with occasional exaggerated bowls, curled arms, and uneven stroke joins that reinforce the handmade character.
Works best for short-to-medium display text where its irregular brush texture and playful shapes can be appreciated—such as posters, children’s or comedic headings, packaging, and greeting cards. It can also support thematic uses like seasonal promotions or quirky branding, but its animated rhythm may feel busy in dense, small-size body copy.
The tone is informal and mischievous, with a storybook and doodle-like charm. Its exaggerated shapes and uneven rhythm feel human and expressive, suggesting spontaneity and humor rather than precision. The strong, inky presence also gives it a slightly spooky or Halloween-adjacent whimsy when set in longer text.
Designed to capture the immediacy of hand lettering with a chunky, inked tool feel, prioritizing personality and charm over geometric consistency. The varied widths, blobby terminals, and lively curves suggest an intention to create an expressive, approachable display face that looks drawn rather than engineered.
Uppercase and lowercase differ noticeably in construction, adding variety and a handcrafted feel in mixed-case settings. Counters are often generous, helping letters stay open despite the heavy, blotted strokes, while some glyphs lean into distinctive, quirky silhouettes that will be more noticeable at display sizes.