Print Bineg 9 is a light, very narrow, low contrast, reverse italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, comics, social graphics, quirky, playful, casual, handmade, youthful, handmade feel, quirky display, casual voice, expressive captions, angular, spiky, bouncy, tall, nervy.
A tall, wiry handwritten print with an irregular, sketch-drawn rhythm. Strokes stay relatively even in thickness but show subtle wobble and tapering at joins, giving a felt-tip or quick-pen impression. Letterforms are narrow and vertical with a slight left-leaning slant, and many shapes use sharp angles and pinched corners rather than smooth curves. Spacing and widths vary from glyph to glyph, reinforcing an informal, improvised texture in both caps and lowercase.
Works best for short display settings where personality matters more than typographic neutrality—posters, playful headlines, packaging callouts, comic-style dialogue, and informal social or editorial graphics. It can also suit branding accents or labels when a handmade, quirky voice is desired, especially at moderate-to-large sizes.
The overall tone is playful and offbeat, with a slightly edgy, doodled energy. Its uneven cadence and angular forms feel casual and human, like handwritten notes or hand-lettered captions. The look is expressive without being messy, projecting a quirky, youthful character.
The design appears intended to capture the immediacy of hand-drawn lettering—tall, narrow forms with lively inconsistencies and angular gestures—optimized for expressive display text rather than long-form reading.
Capitals are notably tall and attention-grabbing, while lowercase stays compact, creating a lively contrast in mixed-case text. Numerals follow the same quick-drawn logic, with simplified, handwritten constructions and occasional asymmetry that reads as intentionally imperfect.