Print Okdel 7 is a bold, very narrow, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: packaging, posters, social media, headlines, stickers, playful, casual, friendly, handmade, bouncy, handwritten feel, display impact, friendly tone, informal branding, marker mimicry, brushy, rounded, lively, chunky, informal.
This font has a bold, brush-pen look with rounded stroke endings and a slightly right-leaning, handwritten posture. Strokes show natural pressure changes and tapered terminals, with occasional thickened joins that give letters a chunky, inked-in feel. The forms are compact and generally narrow, with uneven character widths and a lively baseline rhythm; counters are often small and soft-edged, and many letters use simplified, single-stroke constructions typical of quick marker writing. Numerals follow the same casual brush logic, with smooth curves and compact proportions.
It works best for short, high-impact text where a casual, hand-lettered feel is desirable—such as packaging callouts, posters, cover art, social media graphics, stickers, menus, and playful brand accents. At larger sizes it maintains strong presence and personality, while longer passages may feel busy due to the bold strokes and lively irregularity.
The overall tone is upbeat and approachable, like casual signage or a personal note written with a felt-tip or brush marker. Its energetic rhythm and soft rounding read as friendly and informal, with a slightly quirky hand-drawn personality.
The design appears intended to emulate quick, confident brush-marker lettering—informal print with enough weight and movement to stand out in display settings. It prioritizes personality and immediacy over strict regularity, aiming for an authentic handmade look.
Uppercase and lowercase share a consistent marker texture, but with noticeable hand-drawn variability that keeps repeated shapes from feeling mechanical. The alphabet includes a few distinctive, looped or swashed constructions (notably in letters like Q and some lowercase forms), adding character without becoming fully script-connected.