Print Dogir 3 is a very light, narrow, medium contrast, upright, very short x-height font.
Keywords: notes, greeting cards, kids branding, headlines, quotes, casual, friendly, airy, quirky, youthful, handwritten feel, casual display, personal tone, light texture, monoline, loopy, rounded, open counters, spare.
A very light, monoline handwritten print with gently rounded strokes and a slightly springy rhythm. The letterforms are mostly unconnected and lean toward simple, open structures, with occasional looped joins and soft terminals that feel pen-drawn rather than mechanically constructed. Capitals are tall and narrow with generous internal space, while lowercase maintains a small, delicate presence and an overall uneven, humanized baseline and spacing. Numerals are similarly slender and minimally detailed, keeping the texture light and uncluttered in text.
Well suited to short, casual copy such as quotes, greeting cards, invitations, journal-style designs, and kid-oriented or friendly brand accents. It can work for lightweight headlines and subheads where a handwritten touch is desired; for longer passages it reads best with comfortable sizing and generous line spacing to preserve its delicate strokes.
The tone is informal and approachable, like neat quick notes or classroom handwriting. Its thin strokes and open shapes give it an airy, lighthearted feel, while small quirks in curves and proportions add personality without becoming messy or chaotic.
The design appears intended to capture a clean, personal handwriting look—light, legible, and upbeat—while keeping forms simple enough for everyday, informal display. The emphasis is on an airy texture and approachable personality rather than typographic precision or dense text color.
In running text the capitals stand out prominently against the petite lowercase, creating a lively contrast and a slightly whimsical cadence. Some forms show simplified constructions (notably in curved letters and diagonals), reinforcing the hand-rendered character and prioritizing friendliness over strict typographic regularity.