Print Yiri 9 is a bold, very narrow, high contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, album art, streetwear, packaging, energetic, gritty, expressive, casual, urgent, impact, handmade feel, motion, edginess, texture, brushy, textured, angular, dry-brush, hand-drawn.
An expressive brush-script style with a pronounced rightward slant and a dry, textured stroke edge that mimics a loaded brush lifting off the page. Letterforms are compact and tightly drawn, with quick transitions between thick downstrokes and sharp, tapered terminals that create a punchy, high-energy rhythm. The alphabet mixes simplified, handwritten constructions with occasional exaggerated forms (notably in diagonals and loops), keeping the overall texture irregular but visually consistent across glyphs.
Best suited for short-to-medium display text where texture and motion are assets: posters, promotional headlines, album/playlist artwork, apparel graphics, and punchy packaging. It can also work for quotes or pull-cards when set with generous spacing and a comfortable size to preserve the brush detail.
The font projects a loud, spontaneous tone—like marker or brush lettering made in one confident pass. Its roughened edges and brisk slant give it a raw, street-poster immediacy that feels informal, bold in attitude, and slightly rebellious.
Likely designed to capture the look of fast, confident brush lettering with visible stroke texture and natural variation, prioritizing impact and personality over polished uniformity. The narrow, slanted proportions and crisp tapers suggest a focus on energetic display typography for modern, informal branding.
Uppercase characters read as lively headline forms, while the lowercase maintains a sketchy, handwritten feel with minimal connecting behavior between letters. Numerals follow the same brush logic, with quick, angular turns and tapered ends that preserve the energetic texture in mixed text.