Print Wokag 3 is a regular weight, narrow, medium contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: book covers, children’s media, packaging, posters, greeting cards, quirky, playful, hand-drawn, storybook, whimsical, handmade feel, casual voice, decorative charm, human warmth, sketchy, wiry, bouncy, irregular, textured.
This font presents as a hand-drawn print with wiry, slightly textured strokes and subtle tapering that mimics pen pressure. Letterforms are generally narrow with lively irregularities in stroke edges, joins, and curves, creating a sketch-like outline rather than perfectly smooth contours. Proportions vary from glyph to glyph, with bouncy baselines and inconsistent widths that add motion and personality while remaining legible at display and larger text sizes. Terminals often curl or hook, and some forms show exaggerated loops and open counters that enhance the informal rhythm.
This style suits applications where warmth and informality are desirable, such as book covers, children’s or educational materials, boutique packaging, posters, and greeting cards. It can also work for short editorial pull quotes or headers where a hand-lettered accent is needed without switching to a fully connected script.
The overall tone is playful and a bit eccentric, with a storybook charm that feels personal and handmade. Its uneven cadence and lively terminals give it a friendly, spontaneous voice—more like quick marker or pen lettering than formal typography.
The design intention appears to be capturing the charm of casual hand printing—imperfect, slightly sketchy, and expressive—while keeping a consistent enough structure for readable phrases and headline use. The added curls and subtle stroke texture seem meant to provide personality and a crafted feel rather than strict uniformity.
Uppercase shapes lean toward tall, slender silhouettes with occasional decorative swashes, while lowercase forms keep a casual printed feel with noticeable character-to-character variation. Numerals follow the same hand-rendered logic, with simple forms and occasional curls that match the lettering’s informal texture.