Print Simol 9 is a regular weight, normal width, medium contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, book covers, packaging, kids titles, greeting cards, playful, casual, friendly, whimsical, folksy, hand-lettered feel, friendly tone, informal readability, playful display, rounded, bouncy, hand-drawn, soft terminals, irregular rhythm.
A hand-drawn print style with rounded, slightly wobbly strokes and softly tapered terminals that mimic marker or brush pressure. Letterforms are generally upright but intentionally irregular, with subtle variations in stroke curvature, bowl shapes, and character widths that create a lively rhythm. Counters are open and generous, and the baseline feel is gently uneven, reinforcing an organic, made-by-hand look. Uppercase forms are simple and bold in silhouette, while lowercase maintains a compact, modest-height feel with tall ascenders and occasional quirky details (notably in curved joins and hooks). Numerals follow the same casual construction, with rounded contours and slightly uneven proportions for a cohesive set.
Best suited to short to medium passages at display sizes—posters, covers, product packaging, and headings where a friendly hand-lettered feel is desired. It can also work for children’s or classroom-oriented materials, invitations, and greeting-card style messaging where warmth and informality are an asset.
The font reads as warm and approachable, with a lighthearted, storybook-like personality. Its imperfect, human cadence suggests informality and spontaneity, making text feel conversational rather than corporate. Overall, it conveys a cheerful, crafty tone that fits playful messaging and relaxed settings.
The design appears intended to capture a clean, readable hand-printed look with an intentionally uneven, charming rhythm. It prioritizes personality and approachability over strict typographic regularity, aiming for a natural handwritten voice that remains legible in headline and subhead contexts.
Texture is smooth rather than rough, so the handmade character comes from shape variability and soft edges more than from distressed detail. Spacing appears comfortably loose in running text, and the varied glyph widths add a pleasantly bouncy color while keeping words recognizable at display sizes.