Print Bunol 9 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, packaging, kids, social media, invitations, playful, friendly, casual, whimsical, lively, human touch, approachability, everyday notes, playful branding, informal clarity, rounded, bouncy, marker-like, monoline, soft terminals.
A casual handwritten print with a gentle rightward slant and a monoline, marker-like stroke. Forms are rounded and slightly bouncy, with subtly irregular curves and spacing that preserve a natural hand-drawn rhythm while staying legible. Terminals tend to be soft and blunt, and many letters show simplified, single-stroke construction with occasional looped bowls (notably in rounded counters) and open apertures that keep text airy. Numerals and capitals share the same informal, sketchy logic, with small variations in width and character proportions contributing to an organic texture.
Well-suited to short-to-medium text in contexts that benefit from an informal human touch, such as posters, packaging labels, greeting cards, classroom materials, and social media graphics. It can also work for UI accents, headers, and pull quotes where friendliness and approachability are prioritized over strict typographic uniformity.
The overall tone is warm, approachable, and lightly whimsical—more like quick, confident note-taking than polished calligraphy. Its relaxed slant and rounded forms suggest friendliness and spontaneity, making the voice feel conversational rather than formal.
Designed to emulate an easygoing handwritten print with a slight slant, balancing everyday readability with a lively, personal texture. The intention appears to be a versatile casual voice for branding and editorial accents that want to feel handmade without becoming overly decorative.
The alphabet shows consistent stroke weight and a steady baseline feel, but with intentionally uneven character widths that add charm in display sizes. The texture becomes more expressive in longer lines, where the natural irregularity reads as personality rather than noise.