Print Homih 7 is a very bold, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'DIN Next Paneuropean' by Monotype, 'PF DIN Text' by Parachute, 'Autovia' by Santi Rey, and 'TT Commons™️ Pro' by TypeType (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: posters, kids media, packaging, headlines, logos, playful, chunky, friendly, cartoonish, hand-drawn, friendly impact, handmade charm, playful display, casual branding, rounded, blobby, soft, bouncy, informal.
A heavy, rounded, hand-drawn print style with thick, low-contrast strokes and softly swollen terminals. Shapes are slightly irregular with a lively baseline rhythm and subtle wobble in curves and verticals, giving the letters a drawn-on look rather than geometric construction. Counters are small and often asymmetrical, and overall spacing feels open enough for the weight, with natural variation in letter widths and proportions.
Best suited to short, bold text where personality is the priority: posters, playful branding, kids-oriented materials, snack and confectionery packaging, comic-style headings, and attention-grabbing labels. It can work for large captions or UI callouts when a friendly, informal voice is desired, but the dense weight favors display use over long-form reading.
The tone is upbeat and approachable, with a cozy, cartoon-like warmth. Its chunky silhouettes and gentle irregularities suggest humor and casual confidence, reading as friendly rather than formal or technical.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum impact with a hand-made, approachable character—combining very heavy strokes with rounded, uneven contours to feel casual, fun, and human. It prioritizes charm and immediacy over strict consistency, aiming for a lively, memorable texture in headlines and branding.
Uppercase forms are compact and blocky with rounded corners, while lowercase maintains a simple, single-storey feel that keeps word shapes clear at display sizes. Numerals follow the same soft, inflated logic, leaning toward playful signage rather than strict typographic regularity.