Print Figup 3 is a bold, normal width, high contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, album art, event promos, apparel, packaging, energetic, rugged, expressive, playful, gritty, hand-painted feel, high impact, human texture, fast gesture, brushy, textured, dry-brush, jagged, gestural.
A slanted, brush-driven print style with heavy strokes and pronounced texture, as if made with a dry marker or loaded brush. Letterforms show strong contrast between thick bodies and thinner, tapered terminals, with edges that fray and break for a rough, ink-scraped feel. Proportions are informal and variable, with lively baseline movement and uneven stroke endings that emphasize the hand-made rhythm over geometric regularity. The overall color on the page is dense and dark, but the interior counters and stroke cut-ins stay open enough to keep words readable at display sizes.
This font works best where an expressive, hand-painted tone is desirable: posters, event and nightlife promotions, album or playlist artwork, apparel graphics, and bold packaging callouts. It can also support short social headers and punchy pull quotes, especially when you want visible texture and attitude to carry the design.
The font conveys a spontaneous, streetwise energy—bold and loud, but also casual and friendly. Its rough texture and quick, gestural construction suggest urgency and motion, giving headlines a raw, human presence rather than a polished finish.
The design appears intended to emulate fast brush lettering with intentional roughness and ink breakup, prioritizing personality and momentum over refinement. Its consistent slant and textured stroke behavior aim to deliver an energetic, handcrafted voice suited to attention-grabbing display typography.
Uppercase shapes are compact and punchy, while lowercase forms lean more cursive in spirit without connecting, enhancing the handwritten cadence in continuous text. Numerals match the same brush texture and forward slant, keeping a consistent voice across alphanumerics. The texture becomes a defining feature, so very small sizes or low-contrast printing may reduce clarity.