Print Vukus 9 is a bold, very narrow, medium contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, packaging, social media, headlines, greeting cards, playful, friendly, casual, quirky, youthful, hand-lettered feel, casual warmth, high impact, approachable tone, quick signage, marker-like, rounded, bouncy, hand-drawn, irregular.
A compact, hand-drawn print style with narrow proportions and a lively, slightly uneven rhythm. Strokes are thick and mostly monoline with mild, natural pressure variation, and terminals tend to be rounded or softly blunted, as if made with a marker or brush pen. Letterforms are simple and open, with tall ascenders and descenders and a comparatively small lowercase body, creating a high vertical feel despite the tight width. Spacing and widths vary subtly from glyph to glyph, reinforcing an informal, handwritten consistency rather than mechanical uniformity.
Works best for short-to-medium display text where a friendly handwritten tone is desired—posters, packaging callouts, social graphics, invitations, and greeting-card style messaging. It can also suit labels, menus, and kids or hobby-oriented branding where a casual, personal touch is more important than typographic precision.
The overall tone is approachable and lighthearted, with a spontaneous, doodled energy that reads as personable rather than polished. Its narrow, tall shapes and soft edges give it a cheerful, slightly quirky voice well-suited to upbeat messaging.
Likely intended to mimic quick, confident hand lettering with a marker-like tool: tall, narrow letters that stay readable while preserving the charm of slight irregularity. The design emphasizes personality and warmth over strict geometric consistency, aiming for an informal, conversational voice in display settings.
The numerals and punctuation shown follow the same drawn construction, keeping the texture consistent across mixed-case settings. In longer text, the tight width and strong stroke weight create a dense, graphic line color that feels more like display handwriting than neutral body copy.