Print Binol 9 is a light, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height, monospaced font.
Keywords: posters, packaging, labels, kids, crafts, playful, quirky, handmade, friendly, casual, handmade warmth, informal clarity, playful voice, everyday notes, wobbly, inked, irregular, rounded, sketchy.
A hand-drawn print face with monoline-ish strokes and gently irregular contours that mimic marker or pen lettering. Forms are simple and rounded, with slightly wobbly verticals and softened corners; stroke endings often look blunted or subtly tapered rather than crisply terminalled. Counters are open and clean, while overall spacing and alignment keep a steady, grid-like rhythm despite the organic outlines. Letter shapes lean toward simplified geometric construction, with small inconsistencies across glyphs adding a natural, handmade texture.
Works well for posters, headers, and short passages where an informal handmade voice is desired. It suits packaging, labels, classroom materials, and craft or DIY branding, especially when paired with simple layouts that let the texture show. Best used at medium-to-large sizes for maximum charm and readability.
The overall tone is casual and approachable, with a lighthearted, slightly mischievous personality. Its uneven edges and informal proportions read as human and conversational, suggesting notes, labels, or playful display copy rather than strict, polished typography.
The design appears intended to deliver a neat, consistent handwritten look—more readable than cursive script, but more personal than a standard sans. It aims for a friendly, everyday tone with controlled rhythm, balancing legibility with deliberate imperfections to keep the lettering feeling human.
Capitals are straightforward and legible, while lowercase shows extra character in single-storey forms and curved joins that feel drawn rather than engineered. Numerals follow the same relaxed logic, keeping clear silhouettes with a hand-rendered bounce in the stroke. The sample text shows good clarity at larger text sizes, where the irregularities become a feature rather than noise.