Print Dogiv 7 is a very light, normal width, low contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: personal notes, greeting cards, invitations, kids content, social graphics, casual, playful, friendly, personal, airy, human touch, casual readability, warmth, simplicity, informality, monoline, rounded, slightly bouncy, quirky, loose.
A light, monoline handwritten print with a gentle rightward slant and rounded, softly tapered terminals. Strokes keep an even thickness with subtle wobble, giving an organic rhythm and slightly irregular baselines and spacing. Forms are open and simplified, with generous curves (notably in C, O, S) and tall ascenders/descenders that make the lowercase feel compact through the x-height while remaining airy overall. Numerals follow the same loose, hand-drawn construction with smooth arcs and occasional angled joins.
Well suited to short to medium text where an informal, human touch is desired—greeting cards, casual invitations, journaling-style layouts, classroom or kids-oriented materials, and lightweight social posts. It also works nicely for headers, quotes, and packaging callouts that benefit from a friendly handwritten presence without connected script complexity.
The font feels approachable and informal, like quick neat handwriting for notes or captions. Its relaxed irregularity and bouncy cadence read as personable and lightly whimsical rather than formal or technical.
The design appears intended to capture tidy, everyday handwriting in a clean print style—prioritizing warmth and approachability over strict geometric consistency. The restrained stroke contrast and open counters aim for easy readability while preserving the spontaneity of hand-drawn letterforms.
Uppercase letters are relatively narrow and upright in structure but maintain the same slanted, hand-drawn motion; lowercase shapes show a mix of simple print forms and slightly cursive-like entry/exit strokes. Diacritics are not shown; punctuation is only partially represented in the sample text, where spacing and stroke wobble contribute to a natural, written texture.