Print Yoril 3 is a light, very narrow, medium contrast, upright, very short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, titles, book covers, halloween, packaging, whimsical, spooky, storybook, quirky, hand-inked, expressiveness, handmade feel, thematic mood, decorative caps, display impact, spidery, scratchy, loopy, calligraphic, irregular.
A tall, spidery handwritten print with a fine stroke and lively, slightly wavering outlines that mimic pen-on-paper movement. Letterforms are generally upright but uneven in width and spacing, with frequent looped terminals, hooked ascenders/descenders, and occasional extended entry/exit strokes. Capitals are more decorative than the lowercase, featuring flourished bowls and exaggerated curves, while the lowercase remains narrow and minimal with a small x-height and long verticals. Contrast comes from subtle thick–thin shifts and pressure-like swell points rather than rigid calligraphic construction, giving the set a deliberately imperfect, drawn feel.
Best suited for display use such as posters, title cards, book covers, and thematic packaging where expressive letterforms are an asset. It can work well for Halloween, fantasy, or quirky editorial accents, and for short phrases or logotype-style wordmarks that benefit from a hand-inked personality.
The overall tone is playful and mischievous, with a gothic-tinged whimsy that can read as eerie or magical depending on context. Its irregular rhythm and wiry silhouettes evoke hand-written notes, potion labels, or storybook headings—more characterful than polite.
The design appears intended to capture an informal, hand-drawn print style with dramatic, narrow proportions and decorative flourishes—prioritizing character and atmosphere over uniform texture. Its mix of simple stems and embellished curves suggests a goal of creating an eerie-yet-playful voice for headings and themed display typography.
Readability is strongest at larger sizes where the thin strokes and delicate hooks don’t fill in. The numerals and capitals carry much of the personality through curls and exaggerated proportions, while some straight-stem letters lean toward minimalist strokes that amplify the font’s jittery, handmade cadence.