Print Elda 3 is a regular weight, very narrow, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, packaging, headlines, social graphics, children's books, casual, handmade, playful, sketchy, rustic, handmade feel, casual tone, informal display, expressive texture, irregular, textured, organic, wiry, uneven.
A compact, hand-drawn print face with wiry strokes and gently uneven contours that preserve the feel of pen or brush on paper. Letterforms are narrow and tall with simplified construction, soft terminals, and slight wobble in stems and curves. Spacing and widths vary noticeably from glyph to glyph, creating a lively rhythm, while counters stay fairly open for a drawn style. The overall texture is lightly rough and inconsistent in edge definition rather than crisply geometric.
This style suits short-to-medium display text where a handcrafted tone is desirable, such as posters, packaging callouts, social media graphics, and playful editorial headers. It can also work for captions, labels, and small blocks of text when set with comfortable line spacing, letting the irregular rhythm read as intentional texture.
The font reads friendly and informal, with a quick, personal note-taking energy. Its narrow, animated shapes and irregular stroke behavior add a playful, slightly scrappy tone that can feel handmade and approachable rather than polished or corporate.
The design appears intended to emulate quick, natural handwriting while keeping characters unconnected and legible, prioritizing personality and texture over strict uniformity. Its narrow proportions and animated outlines suggest a goal of fitting more text into a line while retaining an expressive, handmade presence.
The lowercase shows a simple single-storey approach in places and occasional idiosyncratic details (such as lively descenders and slightly asymmetric curves) that reinforce the drawn character. Numerals follow the same narrow, sketch-like construction and match the letter texture closely, supporting cohesive use in short text and labeling.