Print Kiruh 7 is a bold, narrow, low contrast, reverse italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, kids media, social graphics, playful, casual, friendly, quirky, youthful, handmade feel, high impact, approachability, expressive display, brushy, rounded, chunky, bouncy, hand-drawn.
A lively hand-drawn print face with thick, rounded strokes and a slightly slanted, forward-moving rhythm. Letterforms are simplified and somewhat irregular, with soft corners, uneven stroke terminals, and a bouncy baseline that keeps the texture animated rather than mechanical. Counters are generally compact and shapes lean toward tall, narrow silhouettes, helping the alphabet feel energetic and tightly paced in lines of text.
Best suited to display settings where personality matters more than strict regularity: posters, bold headlines, playful packaging, and social or editorial graphics. It can also work for short captions or pull quotes when a casual, hand-made tone is desired, while longer reading passages may feel visually busy due to the strong texture and irregular rhythm.
The overall tone is informal and upbeat, with a doodled, weekend-marker feel that reads as approachable and a bit mischievous. Its unevenness and exaggerated shapes give it personality, making it feel conversational and human rather than polished or corporate.
The design appears intended to emulate quick, confident marker lettering with a consistent heavy stroke, prioritizing charm and immediacy over typographic neutrality. It aims to deliver an expressive, handmade look that stays legible at display sizes while retaining a spontaneous, sketched quality.
Many glyphs show distinctive, stylized construction (notably angular bowls and triangle-like apertures in a few capitals), reinforcing a custom, illustrated character. The numerals match the same chunky, hand-rendered logic and maintain consistent color on the page, creating strong visual presence in short strings.