Print Ighe 7 is a bold, normal width, medium contrast, reverse italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, book covers, headlines, packaging, logos, playful, retro, hand-cut, quirky, storybook, handmade texture, display impact, themed flair, expressive lettering, angular, chiseled, roughened, spiky, rhythmic.
This font features chunky, irregular letterforms with a pronounced right-leaning, hand-drawn slant and a lively, uneven rhythm. Strokes are heavy and taper into sharp, knife-like terminals, creating a chiseled, cut-paper feel rather than smooth brush curves. Counters are compact and sometimes pinched, with slightly inconsistent widths and shaping that emphasize a handmade, carved look. Overall spacing and proportions feel deliberately informal, with strong silhouette contrast and jagged details that stay consistent across uppercase, lowercase, and numerals.
It performs best in short-to-medium display settings such as posters, titles, book covers, and playful branding where texture and attitude are desirable. It can also work for packaging callouts, labels, or event graphics where a handmade, slightly spooky or comic flavor is useful. For longer text, it’s most effective when set large with generous spacing to preserve legibility.
The tone reads mischievous and theatrical, mixing a vintage display energy with a handmade, craft-forward attitude. Its spiky terminals and lively bounce suggest comic, spooky, or fantasy-leaning themes without becoming overly ornate. The result feels attention-grabbing and characterful, suited to expressive, personality-first typography.
The design appears intended to mimic hand-cut or carved lettering with a consistent slant and deliberately uneven contours. It prioritizes distinctive silhouettes and energetic texture over neutrality, aiming to add character and motion to headlines and themed display typography.
Uppercase forms tend to be more emblematic and angular, while lowercase keeps the same cut-in, notched logic for cohesion. Numerals share the same wedge-like terminals and irregular stroke edges, helping mixed alphanumeric settings feel stylistically unified. The strong slant and jagged detailing can reduce clarity at very small sizes, but enhances impact at display scales.