Print Midip 7 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: education, children’s, greeting cards, invitations, packaging, friendly, casual, playful, approachable, handmade, informality, warmth, clarity, personality, readability, monoline, rounded, soft terminals, open counters, marker-like.
The letterforms are monoline and softly rounded, with slightly uneven curves and terminals that mimic a felt-tip or marker stroke. Proportions are compact with relatively small lowercase bodies compared to the capitals, and the rhythm shows subtle width variation from glyph to glyph. Shapes are simplified and open—counters stay clear, joins are uncomplicated, and diagonals (like V/W/X) have a loose, hand-drawn geometry that keeps the texture lively while remaining legible.
It works well for kid-focused and family-friendly communication, such as educational worksheets, classroom materials, storybook-like headings, and playful packaging. It also suits casual branding, invitations, greeting cards, posters, and social graphics where a warm handwritten tone is desired. For best results, use it in short to medium passages or display sizes where its organic texture can be appreciated.
This font feels friendly and casual, with the easygoing tone of quick marker notes or a neat classroom hand. Its rounded forms and gentle irregularities add warmth and approachability, giving text an informal, human presence without becoming messy. Overall it reads as playful and personable rather than formal or technical.
The design appears intended to capture the authenticity of natural handwriting while maintaining consistent, readable forms for longer text. It balances charm and legibility by keeping strokes simple and counters open, using small irregularities to avoid a mechanical look. The result aims for a dependable everyday handwritten voice that stays clear in common layout sizes.
Capitals are notably round and spacious (especially O/Q), while many lowercase forms keep simple, single-storey constructions (e.g., a, g) that reinforce the handwritten feel. Numerals are straightforward and open, matching the same soft, marker-drawn character and maintaining a consistent texture alongside the letters.