Print Vidaz 3 is a regular weight, very narrow, medium contrast, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, comics, social graphics, playful, quirky, hand-drawn, whimsical, retro, hand-lettered feel, display impact, compact fit, informal tone, condensed, spiky, bouncy, irregular, angular.
A tall, condensed handwritten print with lively irregularity and a slightly jittery baseline rhythm. Strokes are mostly monoline with subtle swelling, ending in sharp, tapered terminals that often form wedge-like points. Counters are compact and vertical, with narrow apertures and occasional asymmetric joins that reinforce a drawn-by-hand feel. Capitals are slender and assertive, while lowercase maintains a high x-height and tight spacing, creating a dense, energetic texture in text.
Best suited to short-to-medium display settings where personality matters: posters, headlines, packaging callouts, comic-style captions, and social or event graphics. It can also work for playful subheads or pull quotes, but its condensed, animated texture is most effective when given room and used at larger sizes.
The overall tone is playful and a little mischievous, like quick marker lettering for posters or comic signage. Its narrow proportions and spiky terminals add tension and motion, giving the font a quirky, animated personality without becoming chaotic.
The design appears intended to mimic quick, confident hand lettering with a condensed footprint—prioritizing character and punch over uniformity. Its tapered terminals and slightly uneven construction suggest a goal of creating energetic, informal display text that feels handmade and expressive.
The letterforms show intentional inconsistency in widths and curves, producing a lively rhythm across words. Round characters (like O and Q) stay upright and narrow, while diagonals and vertex-heavy letters (V, W, X, Y) emphasize pointed joins; figures follow the same condensed, hand-drawn logic.