Print Yonup 3 is a bold, narrow, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, branding, packaging, social media, headlines, casual, lively, handmade, friendly, expressive, brush realism, human warmth, casual emphasis, quick lettering, display impact, brushy, textured, slanted, energetic, organic.
A slanted, brush-pen style print with thick, rounded strokes and visible texture that suggests dry-brush edges and occasional stroke breakup. Letterforms are compact and slightly condensed, with a consistent forward lean and a rhythmic, handwritten baseline. Terminals are mostly tapered or softly blunted rather than sharply cut, and curves stay open and buoyant, keeping counters readable even at heavier stroke widths. Overall spacing feels naturally irregular in a controlled way, reinforcing the hand-drawn character while remaining cohesive across caps, lowercase, and numerals.
Well suited for short to medium-length copy where a personable, handmade voice is desired, such as posters, packaging callouts, café menus, labels, social graphics, and brand accents. It performs especially well in headlines, pull quotes, and promotional messaging where its brush texture and forward slant can add urgency and charm.
The font conveys an upbeat, personable tone—more conversational than formal—with a confident, energetic motion. Its brushy texture adds warmth and immediacy, evoking quick marker lettering and casual signwriting. The overall feel is modern-informal, friendly, and attention-getting without becoming overly decorative.
Likely designed to emulate fast, confident brush lettering in an unconnected print style, balancing expressive texture with practical legibility. The goal appears to be a versatile casual display face that brings human warmth to contemporary layouts without relying on elaborate script connections.
Uppercase forms read as simple, gestural capitals rather than constructed display caps, and the lowercase maintains a consistent handwritten cadence with occasional angular joins and brisk curves. Numerals share the same brisk stroke behavior and rounded weight, matching the text color well in mixed settings. The texture becomes a defining feature at larger sizes, while at smaller sizes it reads more like a soft, organic edge.