Print Hemaz 3 is a bold, narrow, medium contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, labels, book covers, playful, handmade, quirky, rustic, lively, hand-lettered feel, casual display, approachable tone, textured character, brushy, chunky, wobbly, rounded, irregular.
A chunky, hand-drawn print style with visibly irregular contours and subtly wobbly baselines. Strokes look brush- or marker-made, with tapered ends, occasional flares, and small ink-like bumps that create a rough, organic edge. Proportions are compact and uneven in a deliberate way: bowls are rounded but slightly squashed, counters vary from glyph to glyph, and widths shift noticeably across the alphabet. The overall rhythm is energetic and textured rather than mechanically consistent.
Best suited for short to medium display text where personality is the priority: posters, headlines, labels, packaging, and cover titles. It can also work for pull quotes or section headers in casual editorial layouts, but the irregular stroke edges and varying widths make it less ideal for long body copy at small sizes.
The font reads as casual and expressive, with a whimsical, slightly scrappy personality. Its uneven edges and lively shapes suggest an approachable, crafty tone—more like a quick hand-lettered sign than polished branding typography.
The design appears intended to capture the spontaneity of hand lettering in a bold, readable print form. Its irregular outlines, compact shapes, and animated rhythm prioritize charm and informality over strict typographic uniformity.
Capitals and lowercase share the same handmade logic, with simplified forms and occasional angular nicks that add character. Numerals are similarly informal and weighty, designed to match the letterforms rather than sit neutrally. Legibility holds up well at display sizes, while the textured edges and varying widths become more prominent as size increases.