Print Dabiz 3 is a regular weight, narrow, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, youth branding, stickers, playful, casual, energetic, quirky, youthful, handmade feel, informal display, expressive contrast, quick lettering, brushy, angular, marker-like, spiky, jagged.
A narrow, hand-drawn print style with high-contrast strokes that alternate between thick, brushy fills and hairline verticals. Letterforms are largely upright but irregular, with angled terminals, sharp corners, and occasional wedge-like joins that create a lively, sketchy rhythm. Curves are simplified and slightly flattened, counters are modest, and spacing feels intentionally uneven, reinforcing an informal, hand-rendered texture. Numerals and capitals show more dramatic stroke shifts, while lowercase maintains a simple, legible silhouette with a tall, slender stance.
Best suited to short display settings where personality is more important than typographic neutrality, such as posters, covers, labels, packaging callouts, and casual branding. It can also work for quotes or captions at larger sizes, where the high-contrast strokes and narrow proportions remain clear.
The overall tone is upbeat and spontaneous, like quick marker lettering used for notes, posters, or casual titles. Its sharp, edgy angles and bouncy rhythm add a mischievous, comic energy without becoming overly decorative.
The design appears intended to capture fast, confident hand lettering with a brush/marker tool, emphasizing contrast, angularity, and an intentionally imperfect rhythm. It aims to deliver an informal display voice that reads quickly while keeping a distinctly handmade edge.
Repeated use of thin, straight vertical strokes (notably in letters like I, H, l, and t) contrasts strongly with heavier strokes elsewhere, creating a distinctive “inked then lifted” feel. Baseline and cap-height alignment are generally consistent, but stroke edges and proportions vary enough to keep the texture visibly handmade.