Print Ulnet 9 is a light, very narrow, low contrast, upright, very short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, greeting cards, packaging, social graphics, playful, friendly, casual, quirky, airy, handwritten charm, casual legibility, personality, whimsy, monoline, tall, spidery, hand-drawn, loose.
A tall, wiry handwritten print with monoline strokes and gently rounded terminals. The letterforms are narrow and vertically oriented, with generous ascenders/descenders and compact lowercase bodies, creating an open, airy rhythm. Curves are slightly irregular in a natural hand-drawn way, and many capitals use simplified, single-stroke constructions with soft bends rather than rigid geometry. Spacing feels light and uneven by intention, reinforcing an informal, sketch-like texture in both the alphabet grid and text samples.
This font works best for short to medium-length copy where a human, informal voice is desired—such as headlines, posters, greeting cards, labels, and social media graphics. It can also support playful branding accents and casual packaging where a light, handwritten texture adds personality.
The overall tone is casual and approachable, with a lightly whimsical, doodled character. Its lanky proportions and relaxed stroke endings give it a youthful, spontaneous feel rather than a polished or formal one.
The design appears intended to mimic quick, neat hand lettering: unconnected print forms with consistent monoline weight, tall proportions, and a deliberately imperfect rhythm. The goal is a friendly handwritten look that stays legible while preserving the spontaneity of pen-drawn strokes.
In running text, the narrow, tall shapes create a distinctive vertical cadence, with particularly prominent ascenders in letters like b, d, h, k, l and t. Numerals follow the same hand-drawn logic, reading clearly while retaining the same loose, slightly idiosyncratic construction.