Print Aknod 7 is a light, narrow, low contrast, italic, very short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, packaging, headlines, social media, greeting cards, casual, friendly, playful, breezy, youthful, human warmth, informality, personal note, approachability, display legibility, hand-drawn, monoline, loose, quirky, rounded.
A lively hand-printed script with a monoline feel and a noticeably right-leaning rhythm. Strokes are smooth and slightly wobbly in a natural way, with rounded terminals and occasional tapered joins that mimic quick pen writing. Letterforms are compact and irregular in width, with open counters and simplified construction; capitals are tall and prominent, while lowercase stays small and bouncy. Overall spacing is airy and uneven in an intentional, handwritten manner, and numerals follow the same informal, single-stroke logic.
Best suited for short to medium text where an informal voice is desired—posters, packaging callouts, invitations, greeting cards, and social graphics. It performs especially well in headlines, quotes, and brand accents where handwritten warmth and personality are more important than strict uniformity.
The font reads as relaxed and approachable, like quick notes or casual labeling. Its energetic slant and loose linework add a conversational tone, suggesting spontaneity and a lighthearted, personal touch rather than formality or precision.
The design appears intended to capture the immediacy of handwritten print: quick, legible letterforms with a consistent slant and an intentionally imperfect baseline and spacing. It aims to feel personal and friendly while staying readable in display contexts.
Uppercase forms have a slightly calligraphic flair (notably in curved letters like C, G, and Q), while many lowercase glyphs favor simple, single-storey shapes. The sample text shows good momentum at larger sizes, where the subtle wobble and hand pressure variations become part of the charm.