Print Vedog 7 is a light, very narrow, high contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: book titles, packaging, invitations, posters, quotes, whimsical, quirky, playful, hand-drawn, storybook, human warmth, casual elegance, decorative display, hand-lettered feel, space saving, monoline feel, tapered, spindly, bouncy, irregular.
This font shows a tall, slim handwritten print with noticeably tapered strokes and lively, uneven weight distribution. Letterforms are mostly unconnected and upright, with a slightly wobbly baseline and irregular curves that keep the rhythm human rather than mechanical. Terminals often sharpen to fine points, while occasional thicker strokes appear in verticals and joins, creating a calligraphic, pen-like contrast. Counters are small and elongated, ascenders are prominent, and the overall texture is airy with generous interior whitespace.
It works best for short to medium-length display settings where personality is the priority—book covers, children’s or craft-oriented packaging, invitations, greeting cards, posters, and pull quotes. The narrow proportions and delicate joins also make it suitable where space is tight, provided sizes are large enough to preserve the fine tapers.
The overall tone is quirky and lighthearted, with a whimsical, storybook sensibility. Its narrow, spindly forms and hand-drawn irregularities feel personal and crafty, suggesting a friendly voice rather than a formal or corporate one.
The design appears intended to emulate quick, neat hand lettering with a pen, balancing legibility with charming irregularity. Its tall proportions and tapered strokes aim to create an elegant, whimsical display voice that feels human and lightly decorative rather than strictly text-focused.
Uppercase letters tend to be tall and decorative, while lowercase forms lean toward simplified, handwritten construction with occasional idiosyncrasies (notably in curved letters and diagonals). Numerals keep the same slender, drawn quality, with elegant, looping shapes on some figures that read as ornamental rather than strictly utilitarian.