Print Henar 9 is a bold, very narrow, medium contrast, reverse italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, kids, social, playful, quirky, whimsical, handmade, casual, handmade charm, informal voice, display impact, expressive tone, playful branding, brushy, chunky, irregular, rounded, wobbly.
A lively hand-drawn display face with thick, brush-like strokes and deliberately uneven contours. Letterforms show a slight back-lean and a bouncy baseline, with variable stroke edges that taper and swell as if made with a marker or dry brush. Counters are generally small and soft-edged, terminals are blunt or slightly hooked, and widths vary noticeably from glyph to glyph, creating an organic, improvised rhythm. The lowercase is compact with short ascenders and descenders, and the numerals follow the same chunky, hand-cut silhouette.
Well-suited to posters, headlines, and short bursts of copy where personality is the priority. It can work nicely for children’s materials, playful packaging, event flyers, social graphics, or craft-themed branding where a hand-rendered look supports the message.
The overall tone is humorous and mischievous, with a sketchbook spontaneity that feels friendly rather than polished. Its irregularity reads as human and energetic, suggesting informal messaging, crafts, or lighthearted storytelling.
The design intention appears to be a bold, informal print style that mimics quick hand lettering with a brush or marker. Its back-leaning stance, varied widths, and roughened edges are geared toward expressive display use and a distinctly human, non-mechanical presence.
Texture comes primarily from the ragged stroke boundaries and small angular nicks, which add character at larger sizes. Spacing appears intentionally loose and uneven, reinforcing a handmade feel; in longer text it reads best when used as a display voice rather than for sustained reading.