Print Yegil 9 is a bold, very narrow, medium contrast, italic, very short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, social media, sports branding, energetic, casual, expressive, rugged, streetwise, handmade feel, high impact, fast lettering, informal tone, space saving, brushy, textured, angular, condensed, slanted.
A condensed brush-pen style with a consistent rightward slant and lively, pressure-driven strokes. The letterforms are built from quick, tapered marks that leave slightly ragged edges and occasional blunt terminals, creating a dry-brush texture. Proportions are tight and compact, with small counters and a low lowercase profile; ascenders and capitals dominate the vertical rhythm. Curves are often simplified into angular turns, and diagonals feel snappy and directional, giving the overall set a fast handwritten cadence.
Best suited to short, high-impact settings such as posters, headlines, titles, and promotional graphics where the brush texture and speed-of-hand character can read clearly. It also fits packaging labels and social media creatives that benefit from an informal, energetic handwritten voice. For longer passages, it will perform better at larger sizes where the tight counters and textured edges don’t reduce clarity.
The font reads as spontaneous and human, with an assertive, energetic voice. Its brushy texture and condensed stance evoke an informal, urban sensibility—more like a marker note or hand-painted caption than polished calligraphy. The overall tone is confident and slightly rough, emphasizing motion and immediacy.
The design appears intended to mimic quick brush lettering with visible stroke energy and natural irregularities, prioritizing personality and motion over typographic neutrality. Its condensed, slanted construction suggests a focus on fitting punchy phrases into limited space while retaining a bold, hand-made feel.
Uppercase glyphs show strong individuality and occasional decorative flicks, which adds personality but also increases variability in word shapes. Spacing appears relatively tight, and the heavy stroke mass can cause counters to close up at smaller sizes, making the texture more prominent in running text. Numerals match the same brisk, hand-drawn construction and share the same slanted, compact footprint.