Print Birah 9 is a light, narrow, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: children’s design, packaging, posters, invitations, classroom materials, friendly, playful, casual, whimsical, approachable, human warmth, informal clarity, everyday notes, approachable branding, rounded, monoline, loose, bouncy, soft terminals.
A casual, hand-drawn print style with monoline strokes and softly rounded terminals. Letterforms are compact and slightly condensed, with gentle irregularities in stroke placement and curvature that create an organic rhythm without breaking legibility. Curves are open and airy (notably in C, G, S, and e), and joins tend to be simple and unembellished, giving the alphabet a clean, sketch-like clarity. Capitals feel slightly taller and more varied in stance than the lowercase, while numerals are simple, rounded, and consistent with the same pen-like stroke.
Well-suited to applications that benefit from an informal, human touch such as children’s products, educational worksheets, packaging, café menus, greeting cards, and casual posters. It can also work for short UI labels or social graphics where warmth and approachability are more important than strict typographic formality.
The overall tone is friendly and lightly quirky, like neat handwriting used for labels or informal notes. Its even, unforced strokes and rounded shapes keep it approachable, while the small inconsistencies add personality and a human, conversational feel.
Likely designed to capture the look of tidy, hand-printed lettering while remaining consistent enough for paragraph-length set text. The emphasis appears to be on friendliness, clarity, and an everyday handmade character rather than calligraphic flair or strong stylistic contrast.
Spacing appears comfortable and forgiving in text, with clear counters and minimal visual noise, helping longer lines stay readable. Several forms lean toward simplified, handwritten constructions (single-storey a, open e), reinforcing an everyday, informal voice.