Print Didos 7 is a very light, normal width, medium contrast, upright, very short x-height font.
Keywords: greeting cards, craft branding, children’s media, social graphics, packaging accents, casual, friendly, playful, whimsical, hand-drawn, handwritten warmth, approachability, informal voice, human texture, casual readability, monoline, rounded, loose, bouncy, irregular.
A casual hand-drawn print with thin, monoline strokes and softly rounded turns. Letterforms show gentle irregularities in stroke trajectory and proportions, with slightly wavering lines and occasional tapered terminals that mimic pen pressure. Capitals are tall and open, while lowercase is compact with short ascenders/descenders, creating a bouncy rhythm and noticeable size contrast between cases. Curves are generously wide (notably in C, O, Q), and spacing feels airy and uneven in a natural handwritten way rather than mechanically consistent.
This font works well for short to medium-length text where a personal, handmade voice is desired—cards, invitations, quotes, classroom materials, labels, and light branding accents. It also suits digital graphics and packaging where warmth and informality matter more than strict typographic uniformity.
The overall tone is approachable and personable, with a light, spontaneous character that reads as informal and human. Its uneven cadence and rounded shapes give it a playful, conversational feel suited to relaxed messaging.
The design appears intended to capture a neat but unpolished handwritten print—legible and friendly, yet intentionally imperfect to preserve an authentic, drawn-by-hand texture.
Distinctive handwritten quirks—such as the tall, slender i/j with small dots, a simple single-storey a, looped forms in g and q, and narrow, angular diagonals in M/N/V/W—reinforce a sketchy, unforced look. Numerals are similarly simple and lightly drawn, matching the alphabet’s casual texture.