Print Fadid 9 is a bold, normal width, high contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, album art, game titles, event promos, grunge, energetic, expressive, raw, edgy, handmade feel, impact, texture, motion, attitude, brushy, ragged, textured, irregular, angular.
A rough brush-style print face with heavy, high-contrast strokes and a pronounced rightward slant. Letterforms are built from quick, tapered marks with visibly ragged edges and occasional ink-break texture, creating uneven contours and a hand-rendered rhythm. Proportions vary from glyph to glyph, with slightly jumpy widths and a lively baseline feel; counters are often tight and partially closed, especially in rounded forms. Numerals match the same dry-brush texture and slanted stance, maintaining an overall dark, punchy color on the page.
Best suited for display settings such as posters, headlines, cover art, and promotional graphics where texture and attitude are desirable. It can add punch to short phrases, labels, and title treatments, but the rough detailing may reduce comfort for long passages at small sizes.
The font conveys a gritty, urgent tone—like fast marker or brush lettering made for impact rather than polish. Its scratchy texture and irregular shapes give it a rebellious, street-level energy that reads as loud and physical.
The design appears intended to emulate fast, forceful brush lettering with a distressed, dry-ink finish—prioritizing personality and motion over uniformity. Its slant and jagged stroke behavior suggest a deliberate attempt to create speed, tension, and visual impact.
Despite the distressed surface, the design keeps recognizable, straightforward skeletons that help short words remain legible. The texture and variable stroke endings become more prominent at larger sizes, where the bristle-like edges and torn terminals read as an intentional visual feature.