Print Hagij 7 is a bold, very narrow, low contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, children’s, halloween, packaging, playful, spooky, whimsical, hand-drawn, storybook, personality, display impact, handmade feel, themed titles, brushy, cartoony, irregular, tapered, pointed terminals.
A lively hand-drawn print face with chunky, inked strokes and frequent tapering that creates pointed, slightly flame-like terminals. Letterforms are tall and compact with tight internal counters and an uneven rhythm that feels intentionally irregular rather than mechanically uniform. Curves are soft but not perfectly smooth, and many strokes swell and pinch as if made with a felt tip or brush, giving the shapes a slightly wobbly silhouette. Caps and lowercase share a consistent drawn style, while numerals echo the same organic weight and narrow, condensed footprint.
Best suited to short display text where its tapered, expressive strokes can be appreciated—posters, titles, stickers, packaging callouts, and playful branding. It also fits seasonal or themed work (especially spooky or fantastical) and children’s or humor-forward applications. For long body copy, the dense counters and irregular rhythm are likely to feel heavy, so it’s most effective in larger sizes and brief bursts.
The overall tone is playful and mischievous, with a hint of spooky theatricality coming from the sharp tips and inky blobs. It reads like a cartoon title card or a hand-lettered prop—energetic, informal, and attention-seeking rather than reserved. The unevenness adds personality and a crafty, homemade charm.
The design appears intended to mimic quick, confident hand lettering with a brush/marker feel, prioritizing character and immediacy over typographic neutrality. Its condensed proportions and sharp-tipped terminals are geared toward making headlines feel animated and memorable.
The texture remains clean (solid fills rather than distressed grain), but the stroke modulation and asymmetry keep it from feeling polished or geometric. Round letters like O/Q and forms with bowls show tight counters that can darken at smaller sizes, while the distinctive pointed terminals become a key identifying feature at display sizes.