Print Bulis 9 is a light, narrow, monoline, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: children’s books, classroom materials, craft packaging, greeting cards, social graphics, friendly, casual, playful, approachable, hand-drawn, informal note, friendly tone, human touch, simple readability, rounded, bubbly, open forms, soft terminals, irregular rhythm.
This font presents a hand-drawn print style with smooth, rounded strokes and gently uneven proportions that preserve a natural marker/pen rhythm. Letterforms are mostly simple and open, with soft terminals and minimal contrast, giving counters a roomy feel and keeping shapes clear at smaller sizes. Uppercase forms are straightforward and slightly condensed, while lowercase shows a casual, single-storey construction (notably in a and g) and a relaxed mix of curves and straight stems. Numerals match the same rounded, handwritten construction with consistent stroke feel and modest quirks that reinforce the informal character.
It works well for short-to-medium text in informal contexts such as educational worksheets, kids’ titles, invitations, labels, and light branding that benefits from a personable voice. The clean, open shapes also suit captions and UI microcopy where a friendly handwritten flavor is desired without connecting script complexity.
The overall tone is friendly and conversational, with a lighthearted, everyday warmth that feels personal rather than polished. Its subtle irregularities read as human and approachable, lending an easygoing, kid-friendly energy without becoming overly messy.
The design appears intended to mimic neat, everyday hand lettering—readable and pleasant, with rounded forms and gentle inconsistencies that suggest a quick hand-drawn note. It prioritizes approachability and clarity over strict typographic precision.
Stroke joins and curves favor softened corners over sharp geometry, and spacing feels intentionally loose enough to keep text airy in running lines. The design maintains good consistency across the set while allowing small variations in width and curvature to keep the handwritten illusion.