Print Enlid 3 is a bold, normal width, medium contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, album covers, headlines, game titles, packaging, gritty, expressive, handmade, edgy, energetic, handmade impact, grunge texture, diy attitude, expressive display, rough lettering, brushy, rough, jagged, dry-brush, angular.
This font uses thick, brush-like strokes with visibly rough, torn edges and frequent tapering at stroke ends, creating a dry-brush silhouette. Letterforms lean forward and vary in width and texture, producing an uneven rhythm that feels intentionally handmade. Shapes are generally angular with occasional sharp notches and broken contours; counters can be irregular and slightly pinched, and terminals often finish with a scratchy flick. Overall spacing reads slightly loose and organic, with a lively, imperfect baseline and consistent stroke presence across caps, lowercase, and figures.
Best suited to display uses where texture and attitude are desirable: posters, event or band flyers, album/cover art, game or film titles, and expressive packaging or labels. It can work for short subheads or pull quotes, but the rough edges and irregular rhythm make it less ideal for long-form reading or small UI text.
The overall tone is raw and high-energy, like quick marker or brush lettering made with a worn tool. It feels gritty and rebellious, with a street-poster immediacy and a touch of punk/DIY attitude. The texture and forward slant add urgency and motion, making the voice feel loud and expressive rather than polished.
The design appears intended to deliver a bold, hand-painted/hand-lettered effect with visible material texture, prioritizing character and impact over geometric regularity. It aims for an authentic, DIY mark-making feel that holds together across a full alphanumeric set while preserving spontaneous, roughened contours.
Capitals have a strong, emblem-like presence with simplified, jagged construction, while the lowercase keeps a compact, handwritten feel that remains legible in short bursts. Numerals share the same torn-edge texture and angular construction, matching the set’s aggressive rhythm and maintaining a consistent “ink drag” look in text.