Print Obled 7 is a regular weight, normal width, medium contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: kids branding, packaging, posters, greeting cards, craft labels, friendly, playful, casual, whimsical, approachable, human warmth, casual tone, easy readability, hand-drawn texture, rounded, monoline, soft corners, hand-drawn, quirky.
A rounded, monoline handwritten print with softly blunted terminals and subtly uneven stroke edges that mimic marker or felt-tip pressure. Proportions are open and generous, with circular bowls (O, o, 0) and simple, geometric underpinnings that keep the alphabet highly recognizable. Curves dominate and corners are eased rather than sharp, while occasional wobble and slight asymmetry add a drawn-on-paper rhythm. Spacing feels airy and even, supporting clear word shapes in mixed-case text.
This font works well where an informal, approachable voice is needed: children’s and family-oriented branding, playful packaging, craft and DIY labels, classroom materials, invitations, greeting cards, and casual headlines. It can also suit short body text in friendly contexts, especially at comfortable sizes where the hand-drawn edges read as intentional texture.
The overall tone is light, personable, and a bit whimsical—more like neat casual handwriting than a formal display face. Its rounded forms and gentle irregularities give it an inviting, human presence that reads as friendly and informal.
The design appears intended to capture the warmth of hand-lettered print while preserving legibility through simple, rounded structures and consistent stroke weight. Its restrained irregularities suggest a goal of looking human and personable without becoming messy or overly stylized.
Uppercase forms lean toward simple, sign-like constructions, while lowercase keeps a clean, printed feel with rounded shoulders and straightforward joins (notably in m/n). Numerals follow the same soft, hand-rendered logic, with smooth curves and minimal detailing, helping maintain a consistent texture across letters and figures.