Print Warir 9 is a bold, very narrow, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, packaging, headlines, kids media, social graphics, playful, quirky, handmade, friendly, whimsical, handmade feel, playful display, compact setting, casual tone, condensed, rounded, monoline, bouncy, irregular.
A condensed, monoline hand-drawn print with softly rounded terminals and subtly uneven stroke edges. Letterforms are tall and compact with tight internal counters, producing a dense vertical rhythm. Curves (C, O, S) are slightly lopsided in a natural way, and straight strokes show gentle wobble rather than geometric rigidity. Overall spacing feels consistent but not mechanical, reinforcing the handmade character while staying readable in words and short lines.
This style suits short headlines, posters, labels, and packaging that benefits from a friendly handmade voice. It also works well for children’s or hobby-oriented media, social graphics, and playful editorial callouts where a condensed footprint is useful. For longer text, it will read best with generous leading and moderate sizes to avoid a crowded texture.
The font conveys an informal, approachable tone with a lightly mischievous, storybook-like charm. Its narrow, bouncy shapes and imperfect contours read as casual and human, suggesting humor and spontaneity rather than precision or authority.
The design appears intended to mimic quick marker or brush lettering in a controlled, repeatable way: compact proportions for efficient set-width, plus deliberate irregularities to preserve an authentic hand-rendered feel. The goal seems to be high-impact, informal display typography that stays legible while projecting personality.
Distinctive silhouettes in the uppercase—especially the rounded bowls and narrow apertures—help recognition at display sizes. Numerals follow the same tall, compact construction, and the overall texture stays dark and even due to the steady stroke weight.