Print Godut 7 is a bold, very narrow, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: display, posters, headlines, titles, packaging, spooky, storybook, whimsical, gothic, ornate, thematic display, ornamental caps, vintage flair, playful menace, decorative, tapered, flared, inked, irregular.
This font presents a decorative, hand-drawn print style with compact, condensed letterforms and lively irregular contours. Strokes are heavy and inky with tapered terminals and occasional flared, wedge-like serifs, creating a carved-or-brushed look rather than a mechanically smooth outline. Many capitals include curled swashes and internal spirals, while lowercase shapes stay simpler but retain uneven edges and subtle wobble that reads as intentionally handmade. Counters are often tight, joins are slightly pinched, and spacing feels organically inconsistent in a way that adds character.
Best suited for short display settings where its ornamentation can be appreciated: posters, headlines, book or game titles, themed packaging, and event materials. It works especially well for seasonal or theatrical branding where a spooky or fantastical tone is desired, and is less appropriate for long passages due to tight counters and busy detailing.
The overall tone is eerie and playful at once—evoking vintage spooky signage, fairy-tale chapter headings, and Halloween ephemera. Curled details and drippy, claw-like terminals add a mischievous “dark whimsy” mood, while the condensed proportions keep it punchy and poster-like.
The design appears intended to deliver high personality through handmade irregularity and ornamental capitals, blending old-world decorative cues with playful, slightly sinister flourishes. Its condensed stance and strong black presence suggest it is meant to grab attention quickly in title and signage contexts.
Capitals are significantly more embellished than lowercase, with several letters featuring prominent interior curls that become focal points in words. Numerals follow the same expressive, slightly irregular rhythm, with some figures using spiraled bowls and hooked terminals for visual continuity.