Print Herod 3 is a very bold, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, album art, event promos, branding, energetic, rebellious, graffiti-like, playful, edgy, impact, handmade, expressiveness, attitude, angular, brushy, jagged, irregular, high-impact.
A very heavy, hand-drawn display face with sharp, chiseled contours and a brush-cut feel. Strokes are thick and taper into pointed terminals, producing an irregular rhythm and lively texture across words. Letterforms are mostly upright but slightly unsettled, with asymmetrical bowls, uneven joins, and frequent wedge-like corners that read as quickly carved or slashed. Spacing appears uneven by design, and the overall silhouette of lines is bouncy and dynamic rather than orderly.
Best suited for short, high-impact text such as posters, headlines, titles, and promotional graphics. It can add a gritty, expressive tone to branding moments like logos or packaging headlines, and works well in music- and youth-culture adjacent visuals where a raw, hand-rendered look is desired.
The font conveys a loud, punchy attitude—expressive, a bit rebellious, and street-influenced. Its jagged brush energy and exaggerated shapes create a sense of motion and spontaneity, giving text a raw, hand-made character that feels more like a shout than a whisper.
The design appears intended to mimic bold marker or brush lettering with deliberately rough, angular cuts, prioritizing personality and impact over uniformity. Its proportions and energetic stroke behavior suggest it was drawn to stand out in display settings and to communicate immediacy and attitude.
The strongest visual signature is the combination of chunky mass with sharp cuts: counters are often tight and irregular, and many strokes end in aggressive points. The texture becomes denser at smaller sizes, so the font reads best when allowed to show its distinctive edges and rhythm.