Print Birer 3 is a regular weight, very narrow, medium contrast, upright, very short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, invitations, greeting cards, playful, whimsical, casual, handmade, friendly, handcrafted feel, casual voice, playful display, personal tone, brushy, monoline, lively, irregular, bouncy.
A lively handwritten print with unconnected letters and a lightly brushy stroke. The drawing is mostly monoline with occasional swelling at turns and terminals, and many ends finish in rounded, ink-like blobs that suggest a marker or brush pen. Proportions are tall and compact with a notably small x-height and long ascenders/descenders, creating an airy vertical rhythm. Curves are loose and slightly wobbly, and widths vary noticeably from glyph to glyph, reinforcing an informal, hand-drawn consistency rather than mechanical uniformity.
Best suited to short display settings where the handmade texture is a feature—posters, headlines, packaging, invitations, greeting cards, and casual social graphics. It can also work for short captions or pull quotes when a friendly, informal voice is desired, but the small x-height and variable forms make it less ideal for long, dense text.
The overall tone is playful and personable, with a quirky, storybook-like charm. Its uneven rhythm and soft terminals feel conversational and approachable, leaning toward casual notes, crafts, and lighthearted branding rather than formal typography.
The design appears intended to capture the spontaneity of quick hand lettering while staying legible in a print-like, unconnected style. Its tall proportions, soft terminals, and subtle stroke variation emphasize personality and charm over strict typographic regularity.
Uppercase forms tend to be simplified and narrow with occasional exaggerated strokes (notably in letters like E, F, and T), while lowercase mixes compact bowls with tall stems and minimal counters. Numerals follow the same relaxed construction, with open, handwritten shapes and slight wobble that reads as intentionally imperfect.