Print Vakif 7 is a regular weight, narrow, low contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, book covers, packaging, headlines, game ui, quirky, spooky, playful, handmade, storybook, handmade feel, thematic display, whimsical edge, textural tone, brushy, wiry, angular, jagged, scratchy.
A wiry, hand-drawn print with narrow proportions and a lively, uneven rhythm. Strokes keep a mostly consistent thickness but wobble subtly, with tapered terminals and occasional sharp hooks that make the outlines feel brushed or scratched in. Counters are small and irregular, curves are slightly faceted, and joins can pinch or flare, giving the letters a deliberately imperfect texture. Uppercase forms are tall and somewhat condensed, while the lowercase stays compact with a short x-height and simple, sometimes asymmetric construction; numerals follow the same hand-rendered logic with bouncy, nonuniform curves.
Best suited to display applications where a handmade, characterful voice is desirable—posters, book covers, titles, packaging, and playful branding accents. It can also work for short UI labels in games or themed experiences, especially when a quirky or lightly spooky mood is needed.
The overall tone feels quirky and a bit eerie—like handwritten lettering for a spooky poster or a mischievous storybook. Its uneven edges and hooked terminals add nervous energy, while the consistent stroke weight keeps it readable enough for short lines and titles.
Likely designed to capture the immediacy of hand-drawn lettering with a slightly sinister, whimsical edge. The goal appears to be personality and texture over strict typographic regularity, emphasizing expressive silhouettes and a lively, imperfect cadence.
The font’s character comes from its variable glyph widths and intentional inconsistencies: baselines and sidebearings feel loosely judged, and many shapes lean on angular inflections rather than smooth geometry. This creates strong personality at display sizes but can make long passages feel visually busy.