Print Efli 9 is a regular weight, normal width, medium contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: packaging, posters, headers, craft labels, children’s media, casual, hand-drawn, friendly, playful, crafty, handmade feel, approachability, informal display, human texture, textured, wobbly, organic, rounded, uneven.
A hand-drawn print style with slightly wobbly strokes and softly rounded corners that keep the letterforms approachable rather than sharp. Stroke thickness is generally steady but shows natural marker-like swell and taper, with subtle edge texture that suggests dry media on paper. Proportions are mixed and intentionally irregular: bowls run a bit wide, counters stay open, and spacing varies slightly from glyph to glyph, creating a lively rhythm. Uppercase forms lean simple and readable, while lowercase includes single-storey shapes and tall ascenders/descenders that add bounce to lines of text.
Well suited to short-to-medium copy in contexts where a personal, artisanal voice is desired—such as packaging, café menus, craft branding, event posters, and friendly headlines. It can also work in children’s and educational materials where warmth and legibility are both important, especially at display sizes.
The overall tone feels informal and human, like quick lettering for notes, labels, or hand-made signage. Its gentle roughness and uneven rhythm convey warmth and spontaneity rather than precision or corporate polish.
The design appears intended to capture the look of quick, confident hand lettering with a consistent ductus while preserving natural imperfections. It prioritizes an approachable, everyday feel over geometric regularity, aiming for legible charm in display and informal text settings.
The numerals and punctuation-like dots shown maintain the same handmade texture and slightly asymmetrical construction as the letters, helping mixed-content settings feel cohesive. The font reads best when allowed some breathing room, where its irregular spacing and stroke edges can register as character rather than noise.