Print Fodiv 7 is a regular weight, very narrow, high contrast, reverse italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, packaging, comics, headlines, album covers, quirky, playful, handmade, casual, offbeat, handmade texture, informal voice, expressive display, casual signage, wobbly, sketchy, angular, condensed, upright.
This font has a hand-drawn, marker-like construction with slightly wobbly strokes and irregular contours that keep the texture lively. Letters are generally condensed with a tall, narrow stance, while widths vary from glyph to glyph, creating an uneven rhythm that feels intentionally informal. Stroke endings are blunt and slightly rough, and counters are small and sometimes asymmetric, especially in rounded forms. The baseline and cap alignment are loosely consistent, with small vertical and horizontal deviations that reinforce the drawn-by-hand character.
It works best for display applications such as posters, packaging callouts, comics or speech-bubble text, album covers, and social graphics where a handcrafted voice is desired. Use it for short headlines, labels, or emphatic phrases rather than long-form reading, and give it a bit of size and spacing to let the irregular texture breathe.
The overall tone is quirky and playful, with a homemade immediacy that reads as casual and a bit mischievous. Its uneven rhythm and compact shapes give it an offbeat, indie feel—more zine/poster than polished branding. The texture suggests quick signage or notebook lettering, lending warmth and personality to short messages.
The design appears intended to capture quick, informal print lettering with a narrow, energetic silhouette and visible hand pressure, prioritizing personality and spontaneity over strict uniformity. It aims to feel approachable and expressive, like a consistent set of drawn letters suitable for punchy, characterful messaging.
In running text, the condensed proportions and tight counters can make longer passages feel busy, but the distinct, quirky silhouettes help words pop at display sizes. Numerals follow the same hand-rendered logic, with simplified shapes and slight inconsistencies that match the alphabet.