Print Mobor 3 is a regular weight, normal width, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, packaging, children’s media, social graphics, headlines, playful, casual, quirky, friendly, handmade, handmade feel, informal voice, approachability, playful tone, natural texture, brushy, monoline-ish, rounded, bouncy, irregular.
A casual hand-drawn print with brush-pen behavior and visibly irregular stroke edges. Letterforms are mostly rounded and open, with a lively, uneven rhythm and small fluctuations in stroke width that suggest pressure and speed. Curves are soft and slightly wobbly, terminals tend to be blunt or gently tapered, and counters are generous, keeping the texture airy. Proportions vary from glyph to glyph, with a loose baseline feel and a mix of narrow and wide shapes that enhances the handmade character.
Best suited to short-to-medium text where personality matters: posters, packaging callouts, social media graphics, kids-oriented materials, and casual editorial headlines. It can also work for quotes, invitations, or labels when a friendly handwritten tone is desired, while very small sizes may lose some of the brush texture and irregular detail.
The font reads warm and approachable, with a spontaneous, doodled energy rather than polished formality. Its unevenness and bouncy spacing give it a lighthearted, youthful tone that feels conversational and informal.
The design appears intended to capture an authentic marker/brush handwritten look in an unconnected print style, prioritizing warmth and spontaneity over geometric precision. Its varying proportions and textured strokes are used to create a lively, personable voice that feels drawn rather than constructed.
Uppercase and lowercase share a consistent hand, with uppercase forms often broader and more gestural while lowercase stays simple and readable. Numerals match the same drawn quality, with slightly idiosyncratic silhouettes that reinforce the informal voice. Overall color on the page is moderately dark with noticeable texture from the varying stroke pressure and rough edges.