Print Okdud 7 is a bold, narrow, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, packaging, social media, book covers, headlines, casual, friendly, playful, energetic, crafty, handmade feel, casual display, expressive emphasis, friendly branding, quick brush, brushy, rounded, painterly, bouncy, organic.
A lively brush-printed hand style with a consistent rightward slant and thick, paint-like strokes. Letterforms are compact and slightly condensed, with rounded turns, tapered stroke ends, and occasional swelling that suggests a marker or brush pen. Curves are soft and irregular in a controlled way, giving a bouncy baseline rhythm and uneven texture that reads as intentionally hand-made rather than mechanically uniform. Counters are generally tight, and joins in letters like m/n/u show smooth, flowing transitions without connecting strokes between characters.
Works best in short-to-medium display text where the brush texture and rhythmic irregularity can be appreciated—such as posters, packaging, social graphics, headlines, and casual branding. It can also support pull quotes or emphasis lines, especially when a hand-drawn accent is desired rather than a polished corporate tone.
The font projects an informal, upbeat tone that feels personal and approachable. Its brisk slant and brushy weight add energy, while the rounded shapes keep it friendly and non-threatening. Overall it communicates a crafty, handmade sensibility suitable for casual messaging and expressive headings.
Likely designed to mimic quick, confident brush lettering in a non-connected print style, balancing expressiveness with clear letter recognition. The goal appears to be an energetic, handcrafted look that remains readable for prominent display use.
Uppercase forms are simplified and gestural, with some calligraphic flair in letters like Q and R, while lowercase retains a readable print structure with handwritten quirks. Numerals follow the same brush logic, with rounded, slightly irregular forms and clear stroke endings that keep them legible at display sizes.