Print Haray 9 is a regular weight, wide, low contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, packaging, greeting cards, social graphics, children's content, playful, casual, friendly, handmade, quirky, human touch, informality, approachability, hand-lettered charm, monoline, rounded, bouncy, loose, uneven.
A casual, hand-drawn print with monoline strokes and softly rounded terminals. Letterforms lean slightly and show a loose, bouncy baseline with irregular widths and spacing that mimic quick marker lettering. Shapes are open and simplified, with occasional wobble and asymmetry that keeps the rhythm lively while remaining broadly legible. Counters are generous and curves are smooth, giving the alphabet an airy, informal texture.
Well-suited to short-to-medium copy where a friendly, handmade voice is desired: posters, packaging callouts, greeting cards, classroom materials, and social media graphics. It also works for branding accents or headings when you want an informal, personal feel without connecting script.
The overall tone feels warm, approachable, and lightly mischievous—like notes scribbled on a poster or a playful headline in a zine. Its uneven cadence and rounded forms communicate spontaneity and human presence rather than polish or authority.
The font appears designed to capture the immediacy of hand lettering—quickly drawn, slightly slanted, and intentionally imperfect—while keeping shapes recognizable for easy reading. Its proportions and relaxed stroke behavior suggest an emphasis on personality and charm over strict consistency.
Uppercase and lowercase have clearly different silhouettes, and the numerals follow the same hand-drawn logic with slightly varying proportions. The design favors clear, uncomplicated construction over precision, so it reads best when the natural irregularity is treated as a feature rather than noise.