Print Hirah 9 is a very bold, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, comics, packaging, event flyers, playful, quirky, rough, comic, punk, handmade look, high impact, youthful energy, expressive display, jagged, chunky, angular, irregular, hand-drawn.
A chunky, hand-drawn display face with dense, black strokes and a distinctly irregular contour. Letterforms are built from angular, faceted shapes with chiseled corners and wobbling curves, creating a cut-paper/knife-carved feel rather than smooth brushwork. Proportions vary noticeably from glyph to glyph, with uneven internal counters and inconsistent terminals that reinforce a casual, handcrafted rhythm. The uppercase reads as heavy and compact while the lowercase keeps the same rugged construction, and the numerals follow the same blocky, asymmetrical logic.
Best suited for short, high-impact text such as posters, cover art, headlines, game titles, and attention-grabbing packaging. It can also work for playful editorial callouts or comic-style captions where personality is more important than strict typographic refinement.
The font projects an energetic, mischievous tone—more DIY and offbeat than polished. Its jagged edges and uneven rhythm suggest humor, attitude, and a slightly rebellious, zine-like personality that feels at home in playful or spooky-leaning graphics.
The design appears intended to mimic bold, hand-cut or marker-drawn lettering with deliberately imperfect geometry. Its goal is to deliver immediate visual character and a strong, graphic presence through irregular outlines, angular joins, and varied letter widths.
The strong silhouette and rugged edges help it hold up at larger sizes, but the intentionally uneven shapes and tight, dark interiors can reduce clarity in small text or dense paragraphs. Spacing appears informal, contributing to a lively, bouncy texture in lines of copy.