Print Pemis 3 is a regular weight, narrow, high contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, packaging, quotes, children’s design, playful, handmade, quirky, casual, lively, handmade feel, friendly display, expressive lettering, casual branding, brushy, organic, bouncy, rounded, spiky.
A lively hand-drawn print with brush-pen character and noticeably uneven stroke modulation. Stems tend to be tall and slim while terminals alternate between soft rounded ends and sharper flicks, creating a high-contrast, slightly scratchy texture. Curves are open and irregular, with occasional swelling in downstrokes and thinning in connecting turns; overall spacing and widths vary from letter to letter for an intentionally human rhythm. Uppercase forms are simplified and airy, while lowercase shows more movement and idiosyncrasy, with small counters and compact inner shapes relative to ascenders and descenders.
Best suited to display settings such as posters, packaging, social graphics, book covers, and quote typography where a handmade voice is desirable. It also works well for lighthearted branding accents and short UI labels, but the irregular rhythm and textured contrast are more effective at larger sizes than in dense body text.
The font reads friendly and informal, with a whimsical, slightly mischievous tone that feels personal rather than polished. Its lively stroke changes and uneven rhythm suggest quick marker or brush lettering, lending warmth and approachability to headlines and short phrases.
Designed to capture an informal brush-lettered look with visible human variance, prioritizing personality and spontaneity over strict geometric consistency. The simplified shapes and expressive terminals aim to keep text readable while still feeling drawn rather than typeset.
Numerals and capitals share the same hand-drawn logic, with simplified silhouettes and expressive stroke endings that keep the texture consistent across mixed-case settings. The overall color on the page can look textured and animated due to the alternating thick/thin strokes and varying letter widths.