Typewriter Jire 3 is a very bold, wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height, monospaced font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, packaging, labels, book covers, retro, rugged, playful, handmade, noisy, typewriter feel, aged print, analog texture, display impact, slabby, blunted, inked, worn, soft-edged.
A heavy, monoline typewriter-style face with chunky slab-like terminals and broadly rounded corners. Strokes stay consistently thick, with blunted joins and slightly irregular edges that create a worn, inked impression. Counters are compact and often teardrop-like, giving letters a dense, dark texture, while spacing and alignment maintain a steady mechanical rhythm in text.
Best suited to short, high-impact text such as headlines, posters, and editorial display where a bold, vintage typewriter voice is desired. It also works well for packaging, labels, and title treatments that benefit from an inked, slightly weathered texture.
The font conveys a retro, gritty character—part newsroom/typewriter utility, part playful stamp. Its roughened contours and soft, bulging slabs add a casual, slightly mischievous tone that feels handmade and analog rather than pristine.
The design appears intended to emulate mechanical type impressions with a deliberately imperfect, ink-spread finish, combining strict fixed-width rhythm with softened, worn contours for added personality and atmosphere.
The distressed edge treatment is consistent across capitals, lowercase, and numerals, producing an intentionally uneven color on the page. At larger sizes the roughness becomes a defining texture; at smaller sizes the dense forms read best with generous leading to keep lines from feeling overly heavy.