Print Fodos 3 is a regular weight, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, book covers, headlines, packaging, halloween, rustic, spooky, playful, handmade, storybook, handmade feel, textured display, quirky tone, themed titling, rough-edged, brushy, inked, textured, organic.
A rough, hand-drawn print style with uneven stroke edges and subtly wobbling outlines that suggest a brush or dry ink marker. Letterforms lean on simple, readable structures while keeping irregular terminals, occasional nicks, and variable stroke thickness within each glyph. Curves are slightly lumpy rather than geometric, counters are open, and spacing feels naturally inconsistent, giving text an animated, handmade rhythm. Numerals follow the same irregular, inked texture and maintain clear silhouettes at display sizes.
Well-suited for display typography such as posters, book or game covers, event flyers, and short headlines where texture and personality are desirable. It can also work for themed packaging, labels, and editorial pull quotes, especially in rustic, fantasy, or spooky contexts. For longer passages, larger sizes and comfortable spacing help preserve clarity and keep the textured edges from visually filling in.
The overall tone is earthy and characterful, mixing a quirky friendliness with a lightly eerie, distressed edge. It reads like handmade signage or illustrated titling—expressive and imperfect in a deliberate way—bringing a sense of craft, mischief, and story-driven atmosphere.
Designed to emulate an informal, hand-inked printed look with intentionally roughened contours, prioritizing personality and atmosphere over mechanical uniformity. The goal appears to be a distinctive, illustrative voice that remains readable while conveying a crafted, slightly distressed feel.
Uppercase forms show a strong, poster-like presence, while the lowercase maintains a casual, handwritten cadence without connecting strokes. The texture is prominent enough that it becomes part of the voice, so the font tends to look best when given room to breathe rather than set too small or too tightly tracked.