Print Dinat 3 is a very light, narrow, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, titles, packaging, game ui, quirky, runic, hand-drawn, playful, enigmatic, distinctiveness, handmade feel, cryptic tone, display impact, angular, monoline, pointed, irregular, spiky.
A hand-drawn, monoline display face built from sharp, angular strokes and wedge-like terminals. Letterforms lean on triangular construction and diamond-shaped counters (notably in O/0), with intentionally uneven stroke edges and slight wobble that preserves a sketchy, marker-on-paper feel. Proportions are compact and somewhat condensed, with a lively, inconsistent rhythm across glyphs that reads as deliberately informal rather than mechanically uniform.
Best used for short headlines, poster typography, packaging callouts, and on-screen titles where its angular personality can read clearly. It can also work for playful genre applications like games, fantasy/occult-themed graphics, or quirky branding accents, but is less suited to long passages of small text.
The overall tone is quirky and slightly mysterious, with a runic, puzzle-like flavor created by the pointed geometry and faceted shapes. It feels playful and offbeat—more “doodled cipher” than polite handwriting—making it well suited to eccentric, characterful messaging.
The design appears intended to capture a quick, hand-rendered look using a consistent angular toolkit, prioritizing personality and distinctive silhouettes over strict typographic regularity. Its diamond counters and pointed terminals suggest a desire for an emblematic, slightly cryptic voice that stands out in display settings.
Numbers and caps share the same angular vocabulary, with distinctive, simplified digit shapes and a strong reliance on straight segments over curves. The faceted O/0 and sharp joins can become visually busy in dense setting, so it benefits from generous size and spacing.