Print Hobod 3 is a very bold, normal width, low contrast, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, children’s media, packaging, stickers, playful, chunky, kid-friendly, casual, cartoony, friendly impact, handmade feel, humor, youth appeal, display focus, rounded, blobby, soft corners, uneven edges, hand-drawn.
A heavy, rounded, hand-drawn print face with thick, bulbous strokes and softly irregular contours. Letterforms lean on simple geometric silhouettes (round counters, wide bowls, stubby terminals) but keep an intentionally uneven edge that suggests marker or brush fill rather than crisp vector geometry. Proportions are friendly and compact with a large x-height, short ascenders/descenders, and open apertures that help the black shapes read clearly at display sizes. Spacing feels slightly loose and organic, reinforcing the casual, handmade rhythm across words and lines.
Best suited for short, high-impact text such as posters, headlines, product packaging, labels, stickers, and social graphics where a playful voice is desired. It works especially well for children’s content, casual branding, and fun event materials, and is less appropriate for long-form reading or small UI text where the heavy fills and irregular edges could reduce clarity.
The font communicates a warm, humorous, and approachable tone—more doodled than designed, with a lively, bouncy presence. Its chunky shapes and soft corners give it a kid-friendly, cartoon-like character suited to lighthearted messaging.
The design appears intended to mimic an informal, hand-drawn marker style with exaggerated weight and rounded forms, prioritizing friendliness and immediate visual punch. Its consistent chunkiness and deliberate irregularity suggest a focus on personality and approachability in display typography.
Uppercase and lowercase are both stout and simplified, with noticeable variation in internal shapes and stroke edges that adds personality. Numerals match the same blobby construction and look particularly bold and attention-grabbing, favoring charm over strict uniformity.