Print Lydek 7 is a light, normal width, low contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: children’s, packaging, invitations, posters, social media, friendly, playful, casual, approachable, handmade, human touch, casual clarity, cheerful tone, everyday notes, rounded, monoline, bouncy, open forms, soft terminals.
A monoline, handwritten print face with rounded, slightly wobbly strokes and softly blunted terminals. The letterforms are simplified and open, with gentle curves and occasional asymmetry that keeps the texture lively rather than rigid. Proportions feel compact in the lowercase, while capitals are tall and airy, giving mixed-case text a light, relaxed rhythm. Spacing reads even but naturally irregular in a hand-drawn way, supporting smooth word shapes without looking mechanical.
Well suited to children’s materials, craft and hobby branding, packaging, greeting cards, invitations, and casual posters where an approachable handwritten voice is desired. It also works nicely for short UI labels, quotes, and social content when you want a human touch without joining strokes. For best results, use it at text-to-display sizes where its soft curves and subtle irregularities can remain clear.
The overall tone is warm and informal, like neat marker or felt-tip lettering. Its buoyant curves and slight imperfections project an easygoing, personable voice that feels friendly and unpretentious. The style leans toward cheerful everyday communication rather than formal or technical messaging.
The design appears intended to mimic tidy hand-printed lettering—clean enough for everyday readability while preserving small inconsistencies that signal a human hand. It prioritizes friendliness and ease over typographic strictness, creating a relaxed texture that stays consistent across uppercase, lowercase, and numerals.
Distinctive cues include a single-storey lowercase “a,” a looped descender on “g,” and gently curved strokes in letters like “S,” “J,” and “y,” which reinforce the handmade texture. Numerals are simple and rounded, matching the alphabet’s casual, drawn feel and maintaining consistent stroke behavior across the set.