Print Ukkek 3 is a regular weight, narrow, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, packaging, book covers, branding, playful, whimsical, folksy, friendly, quirky, hand-lettered feel, display impact, friendly tone, compact setting, crafted texture, monoline feel, tall, condensed, rounded terminals, ink-trap like.
A tall, condensed hand-drawn print with lively, high-contrast strokes and subtly irregular contours. Vertical stems tend to be heavier while curves and connecting strokes thin out, creating a calligraphic rhythm without joining letters. Counters are compact and often slightly asymmetric, and many terminals finish in rounded, brushed ends that feel inked rather than mechanically cut. Proportions vary noticeably from glyph to glyph, with narrow sidebearings and a bouncy, uneven texture that reads intentional and illustrative.
Best suited for short to medium-length display settings such as headlines, posters, product packaging, and playful branding where personality is more important than typographic neutrality. It can work well for book covers, café menus, craft and kids-focused materials, and social graphics, especially when given generous size and spacing. For longer reading, it will be most comfortable when used sparingly as an accent typeface.
The overall tone is cheerful and quirky, like neat handwriting made with a brush pen or marker. Its narrow, lofty letterforms add a touch of storybook whimsy and casual charm, keeping the voice approachable rather than formal. The unevenness and tapered strokes give it a human, crafted personality suited to lighthearted messaging.
The design appears intended to capture an informal, hand-lettered look while staying legible in all-caps and mixed-case settings. Its narrow build and tall proportions suggest a goal of fitting expressive display text into tighter horizontal spaces without losing character. The tapered stroke modulation and rounded terminals aim to mimic a brush/ink tool and preserve a handmade texture across the alphabet and numerals.
Capital forms are especially tall with simplified structures and occasional unconventional curves, helping headlines feel distinctive. The numerals follow the same narrow, high-contrast logic, with expressive curves in figures like 2, 3, and 8 and a more angular, handwritten feel in 4 and 7. In text settings the font maintains a consistent vertical rhythm, though the varied stroke weight and narrow fit can make dense paragraphs feel busy at small sizes.