Print Dalod 3 is a light, normal width, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, packaging, book covers, kids content, social graphics, playful, handmade, friendly, casual, quirky, hand-lettered feel, human warmth, casual display, playful tone, brushy, bouncy, rounded, lively, organic.
A casual, hand-drawn print face with irregular, brush-like strokes and visibly variable pressure. Forms lean toward rounded bowls and open apertures, while terminals often taper or end bluntly as if lifted from paper. Proportions and widths fluctuate from glyph to glyph, creating a bouncy rhythm; curves are slightly wobbly and straight strokes are not perfectly rigid, reinforcing the handmade character. Uppercase shapes are simple and roomy, lowercase is compact and lightly uneven, and numerals follow the same sketchy, gestural construction.
Well-suited to short-to-medium text where a handmade voice is desirable: posters, headers, packaging callouts, greeting cards, and editorial illustrations. It can also work for playful UI accents or social graphics, especially when you want type to feel drawn rather than digitally perfect.
The overall tone is warm, informal, and lightly mischievous—more like quick marker lettering than polished type. Its uneven rhythm and expressive stroke contrast read as approachable and human, with a charming, doodled energy that keeps text feeling conversational rather than formal.
Likely designed to mimic quick, confident hand lettering with brush-pen contrast and natural inconsistencies, prioritizing personality and approachability over strict geometric regularity. The goal appears to be a legible, everyday print hand that adds character and warmth to titles and display text.
The face maintains recognizable, legible silhouettes while allowing plenty of intentional inconsistency in stroke endings, joins, and curvature. Round characters (such as O/C/G-like forms) feel airy and open, while verticals show the strongest sense of brush pressure changes, which adds texture in longer passages.