Print Damag 7 is a very light, normal width, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: invitations, book covers, packaging, quotes, posters, whimsical, storybook, hand-drawn, airy, elegant, handmade feel, expressiveness, decorative display, human warmth, lightness, calligraphic, flourished, spiky terminals, organic, sketchy.
A delicate, hand-drawn print style with sharp, pen-like strokes and pronounced thick–thin modulation. Letterforms are mostly upright but lively, with subtly irregular contours, tapered entries, and occasional spurs that give strokes a flicked, brush-pen feel. Counters tend to be open and rounded, while terminals often finish in fine points; overall spacing is loose and rhythmically uneven in a natural, handwritten way. Numerals and capitals share the same light, wiry construction, with a few exaggerated diagonals and asymmetrical joins that emphasize a drawn rather than geometric structure.
Well-suited to display settings where a handcrafted voice is desirable: invitations and greeting cards, book and chapter titles, boutique packaging, short pull quotes, and poster headlines. It can work for brief paragraphs when set generously, but it will perform best where its light strokes and expressive details can be appreciated at larger sizes.
The font conveys a whimsical, storybook tone—refined enough to feel slightly elegant, yet playful and personable due to its sketchy imperfections and expressive terminals. It reads as airy and light, with a touch of vintage charm from its calligraphic contrast and lightly flourished details.
The design appears intended to mimic quick, expressive pen lettering with refined contrast—balancing legibility with charming irregularities. Its mix of crisp points, soft curves, and slightly inconsistent widths suggests an aim for personality and warmth rather than strict uniformity.
In longer text, the irregular stroke endings and high contrast add sparkle but also create a textured color on the line, making it feel more like handcrafted lettering than a neutral text face. Capitals appear particularly characterful, and certain diagonals and cross-strokes are intentionally thin, reinforcing a pen-and-ink impression.