Print Ufgon 3 is a regular weight, narrow, high contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: packaging, branding, social posts, posters, quotes, friendly, playful, casual, handmade, bouncy, hand-lettered feel, approachability, casual display, human warmth, rounded, monoline-ish, soft terminals, loopy, informal.
A casual hand-drawn print style with rounded forms, smooth curves, and slightly irregular stroke modulation that keeps it lively while remaining consistent. Letter shapes are generally narrow with compact proportions, modest ascenders/descenders, and a small x-height that gives lowercase words a lighter, airy silhouette. Strokes end in soft, blunt terminals; bowls and arches are simplified and open, and the rhythm of curves creates a gentle bounce across lines. Numerals and capitals follow the same drawn logic, with a few loopier figures (notably the 2 and 3) that emphasize the handwritten character.
Works well for short- to medium-length copy where a personable, handmade voice is desired—packaging callouts, café-style signage, posters, quote graphics, and friendly brand accents. It also suits headings and subheads in digital layouts, especially when paired with a more neutral text face for longer reading.
The overall tone is warm and approachable, like neat marker or brush-pen lettering used for personal notes and upbeat messaging. Its subtle irregularities and rounded shapes keep it from feeling corporate, leaning instead toward friendly, everyday informality.
Designed to mimic clean, informal hand lettering: readable like print, but animated through rounded construction, gentle contrast, and small irregularities. The intent appears to be an approachable display voice that feels personal and crafted without becoming overly decorative.
Spacing reads on the tight-to-moderate side, helping short words feel cohesive; in longer text the lively letter-to-letter variation becomes a visible texture. The uppercase is simple and legible, while the lowercase carries more personality through looped joins and curved entry/exit strokes, even though letters remain unconnected.