Sans Normal Yigis 3 is a very bold, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Dexa Pro' by Artegra, 'Area' by Blaze Type, 'Trade Gothic Next Soft Rounded' by Linotype, 'TT Commons™️ Pro' by TypeType, and 'Artico' by cretype (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: posters, headlines, apparel, album art, stickers, grunge, handmade, playful, rugged, poster, distressed impact, diy print, vintage stamp, bold branding, textured, rough-edged, chunky, stamped, irregular.
A chunky sans with heavy, compact strokes and noticeably rough, worn edges that read like ink spread or a stamped impression. Curves are broadly rounded and counters stay open, while terminals look blunted and uneven, giving the outlines a slightly distressed silhouette. Width and spacing feel a bit inconsistent from glyph to glyph, creating an organic rhythm that favors impact over precision. Numerals and capitals carry strong, blocky presence, and the overall texture becomes a defining feature at both display sizes and in short text runs.
Best suited to posters, headlines, packaging accents, merch graphics, and any branding that benefits from a stamped or screen-printed feel. It works well in short bursts—titles, labels, callouts, and logotypes—where the textured edges can be appreciated without overwhelming readability.
The font conveys a raw, DIY energy—somewhere between screen-printed merchandise, punk flyers, and hand-inked signage. Its imperfect edges and heavy color make it feel bold, informal, and a little rebellious, with a friendly playfulness underneath the grit.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum impact with a deliberately imperfect, inked texture—capturing the look of handmade printing while keeping letterforms simple and broadly sans for quick recognition.
The distressed contouring is fairly uniform across the set, so the texture reads intentional rather than accidental. In longer lines, the roughness adds visual noise, which can be an advantage for attitude-heavy headlines but can reduce clarity at smaller sizes or in dense paragraphs.