Print Higeh 3 is a very bold, narrow, high contrast, upright, tall x-height font visually similar to 'ATF Railroad Gothic' by ATF Collection, 'Chamelton' by Alex Khoroshok, 'Rhode' by Font Bureau, 'HD Colton' by HyperDeluxe, 'Ansage' by Sudtipos, and 'Palo' by TypeUnion (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: posters, headlines, album art, streetwear, flyers, grungy, playful, rowdy, handmade, punk, impact, diy texture, handmade feel, attitude, grunge effect, distressed, chunky, irregular, rough-cut, blobby.
A chunky, all-caps-forward display face with heavy, compact forms and visibly irregular contours. Strokes are thick with pinched joins and wobbly sidewalls, and many glyphs show distressed voids and nicks that mimic torn paper or worn ink. Counters are small and often uneven, with a generally tall lowercase presence and short extenders, creating a dense, poster-like color. Spacing reads as tight and variable, with uneven widths that add a hand-drawn rhythm and a slightly jittery baseline feel in text.
This font is well-suited to short, high-impact settings such as posters, event flyers, album covers, packaging callouts, and bold social graphics. It works especially well when you want a rough, handmade stamp or cutout look and can give it enough size and contrast to keep the counters readable.
The overall tone is loud, mischievous, and DIY, mixing cartoonish friendliness with a gritty, scuffed edge. It suggests handmade signage, zines, and street-flyer energy—more expressive than precise, and intentionally imperfect for attitude and impact.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum visual punch with a deliberately distressed, hand-made texture—favoring character, grit, and informal energy over clean geometry. Its compact, weighty shapes and irregular rhythm aim to create an expressive display voice that feels printed, worn, and human-made.
Legibility holds best at large sizes where the distressed interior breaks become texture rather than noise. The numerals and uppercase forms feel especially blocky and attention-grabbing, while the lowercase keeps the same rugged personality with simplified, compact shapes.