Print Byroz 3 is a very light, wide, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, packaging, kids, social media, playful, quirky, casual, breezy, youthful, handwritten feel, approachability, casual display, friendly tone, monoline, airy, sketchy, rounded, open counters.
A light, airy hand-drawn print with mostly monoline strokes and occasional tapered joins that read like quick marker or pen lines. Letterforms are wide and open, with generous interior space and simplified construction; curves are smooth but slightly wobbly, and terminals tend to be blunt or softly angled. Capitals mix geometric strokes with loose curves (notably the rounded C/O and the open, looped G), while lowercase forms stay clean and readable with a single-storey a and g and tall, slender ascenders. Overall spacing feels relaxed, and the variable glyph widths create an informal, handwritten rhythm in text.
It performs best in short to medium-length settings where personality matters: headlines, posters, packaging callouts, and social or editorial graphics. The light stroke and open forms keep it legible at moderate sizes, while the hand-drawn rhythm adds charm to labels, invitations, and kid-friendly materials.
The font conveys a friendly, informal tone—lighthearted rather than serious—with a casual, doodled energy. Its unevenness and open shapes give it a personable, approachable feel that suggests spontaneity and humor.
The design appears intended to mimic neat, informal handwriting with a wide stance and minimal fuss, prioritizing approachability and quick readability over strict geometric precision. Its consistent simplicity and airy color suggest a font made to add a human, conversational voice to display text.
Diagonal strokes and joins often show slight asymmetry, reinforcing the hand-rendered character, while counters remain consistently open for clarity. Numerals follow the same casual logic, with simple, readable forms and a lightly drawn presence that pairs well with the letters.