Print Nadoh 7 is a light, normal width, low contrast, reverse italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: packaging, posters, greeting cards, social graphics, children’s materials, playful, casual, friendly, quirky, handmade, handwritten feel, approachability, informal display, everyday notes, rounded, loopy, bouncy, monoline, open forms.
A casual handwritten print with smooth, monoline strokes and gently rounded terminals. Letterforms are slightly right-leaning and uneven in a natural way, with varied character widths and a lively baseline that creates a bouncy rhythm. Counters tend to be open and simple, and curves dominate over sharp corners; joins and intersections look drawn rather than constructed. Uppercase forms are clean and legible, while lowercase shows more personality through occasional loops and soft, simplified structures.
Works well for short-to-medium copy where a warm, personal voice is desired: packaging callouts, posters, invitations, greeting cards, classroom materials, and social media graphics. It can also suit headings or UI labels when you want an informal, human tone rather than a strict typographic texture.
The overall tone feels approachable and informal, like neat marker or pen lettering used for notes, labels, or friendly signage. Its slight slant and relaxed spacing add a conversational, human presence without becoming messy.
The design appears intended to mimic tidy everyday handwriting—legible and consistent, but intentionally imperfect—so text feels personal, friendly, and unpretentious in display and general-purpose settings.
Stroke endings are mostly blunt-to-rounded, with subtle stroke wobble that reads as authentic hand movement. Numerals follow the same straightforward, handwritten logic, keeping the set cohesive for mixed text and casual UI labeling.