Print Dakop 3 is a bold, very narrow, medium contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, stickers, event flyers, playful, quirky, casual, hand-drawn, energetic, handmade feel, display impact, casual voice, playful branding, brushy, marker-like, tall, condensed, angular.
A compact, hand-drawn print with tall, condensed proportions and a lively, uneven rhythm. Strokes feel brush- or marker-made, with tapered terminals, occasional wedge-like joins, and subtly irregular contours that keep the texture organic. Letterforms mix rounded bowls with sharp, angular inflections, and widths vary noticeably from glyph to glyph, reinforcing an informal, handcrafted cadence. Numerals and capitals carry the same brisk, upright stance and slightly bouncy baseline impression, reading clearly while retaining a sketchy, expressive edge.
Best suited to display settings where personality matters: posters, flyers, packaging callouts, labels, and social graphics. It also works well for short headlines, playful branding accents, and informal signage, especially when set with generous spacing and size to let the brushy details breathe.
The tone is lighthearted and mischievous, like quick signage or a spirited note written with a thick marker. Its energetic shapes and narrow build create a punchy presence that feels friendly, comic, and a little offbeat rather than polished or formal.
The design appears intended to deliver a fast, handwritten print look with bold, condensed impact—prioritizing character and immediacy over geometric regularity. Its irregularities and tapering strokes suggest a deliberately human, drawn feel aimed at cheerful, attention-getting display typography.
The condensed build and dark color make it attention-grabbing in short bursts, while the irregular stroke modulation and varied glyph widths add texture that can become busy at smaller sizes. Capitals are especially assertive and graphic, helping headlines pop, while lowercase maintains an informal, handwritten flow without connecting strokes.