Print Farib 9 is a very bold, very narrow, medium contrast, reverse italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, halloween, comics, packaging, spooky, grunge, playful, handmade, rough, distressed display, hand-inked feel, spooky branding, punchy titling, diy texture, choppy, ragged, jagged, inky, irregular.
A compact, hand-drawn display face with heavy, inked strokes and noticeably rough, torn-looking edges. Letterforms are condensed and slightly slanted, with a lively, uneven baseline and variable stroke endings that feel brushy and chipped. Counters tend to be tight and dark, and terminals often taper into angular, irregular points, creating a high-ink, distressed silhouette. Spacing and widths vary from glyph to glyph, reinforcing the handmade rhythm while keeping a consistent overall density.
Best suited for short-form display use—posters, headlines, stickers, packaging callouts, and event graphics—where its rough texture can read clearly at larger sizes. It’s particularly effective for seasonal or themed applications (horror, Halloween, spooky fun) and for comic or zine-style titling where a gritty, hand-inked voice is desired.
The texture and sharp, ragged contours give the font a spooky, mischievous tone with strong Halloween/monster-movie energy. Its informal, scribbled confidence also reads playful and rebellious, like a hand-lettered poster made with a thick marker and a bit of attitude.
The design appears intended to deliver an energetic, hand-inked look with deliberate distress and irregularity, prioritizing character and texture over refinement. It aims to provide a bold, condensed voice that feels immediate and human, as if quickly painted or stamped for attention-grabbing display typography.
The all-caps set reads especially punchy and poster-forward, while the lowercase introduces more bounce and quirky shapes that amplify the handmade feel. Numerals match the distressed treatment and maintain the same compact, dark color, making the set feel cohesive for short, emphatic statements.