Print Nyrew 9 is a bold, narrow, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, social, signage, brushy, energetic, casual, expressive, friendly, handmade look, quick lettering, attention grabbing, casual branding, display emphasis, dry brush, textured, slanted, condensed, punchy.
This font presents as a brisk, brush-pen style print with a consistent rightward slant and compact proportions. Strokes show visible pressure modulation and occasional dry-brush texture, creating slightly rough edges and tapered terminals. Letterforms are mostly unconnected with an informal, handwritten construction; widths vary by glyph, but the overall rhythm stays tight and upright in its spacing. Counters tend to be small and strokes are confidently thick, giving the characters a strong, punchy color on the page.
Best suited for display roles such as posters, headlines, packaging callouts, and social graphics where a handwritten brush feel adds impact. It can also work for short signage phrases or section headers in branding systems that want an informal, energetic voice. For longer text, it performs better in larger sizes and with generous line spacing to preserve clarity.
The tone is lively and personable, with the feel of quick marker lettering on a poster or notebook. Its textured strokes add a handmade authenticity that reads as energetic rather than polished, suggesting spontaneity and motion. Overall it communicates approachability and emphasis, as if meant to catch attention in a single glance.
The design appears intended to mimic fast brush lettering with confident, dark strokes and subtle texture, balancing legibility with expressive movement. Its condensed, slanted forms and punchy weight suggest a focus on attention-grabbing display use rather than extended reading. The overall consistency implies a deliberately controlled “handmade” look rather than purely random variation.
Capitals are assertive and simplified, while lowercase maintains a compact x-height that reinforces the condensed, fast-written look. Numerals are bold and gestural, matching the same brush pressure and slight irregularities seen in the letters. The italic slant and textured joins can make tight settings feel busy, especially at small sizes.