Print Yageb 3 is a bold, very narrow, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, social media, event promo, energetic, casual, handmade, playful, expressive, handmade feel, high impact, quick lettering, casual branding, brushy, textured, slanted, compact, edgy.
A compact, right-slanted hand-print with brush-pen construction and visibly textured strokes. The letterforms are tall and tightly set with narrow interiors, uneven stroke edges, and slight baseline liveliness that suggests quick writing. Terminals are often tapered or blunt, and counters are kept small, giving the face a dense, punchy color. Uppercase forms read as simplified, gesture-driven caps, while the lowercase maintains a consistent forward rhythm with occasional angular turns and looped joins inside individual letters.
Best suited to short, bold statements such as posters, covers, packaging callouts, and social media graphics where its brush texture can be appreciated. It also works for informal branding elements (e.g., café signage, apparel tags, or event promotions) when you want a handmade, energetic voice; for long text, larger sizes and generous tracking help maintain clarity.
The overall tone is informal and lively, with a confident, street-sign immediacy. Its roughened brush texture and forward lean add urgency and motion, while the compact proportions keep it assertive and attention-getting rather than delicate.
The design appears intended to mimic fast, confident brush lettering in an unconnected print style, delivering an expressive handwritten feel with strong visual impact. Its narrow, compact rhythm suggests a goal of fitting loud messaging into tight horizontal space while retaining a distinctly handmade personality.
Digits are similarly handwritten and high-energy, with open, sweeping curves and occasional sharp hooks. The texture is consistent across glyphs, making it feel like a single marker/brush tool rather than mixed techniques; at very small sizes the tight counters and dense strokes may begin to close up.