Print Yamet 3 is a regular weight, narrow, medium contrast, upright, very short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, book covers, packaging, headlines, quotes, hand-drawn, quirky, rustic, storybook, expressive, hand-lettered feel, organic texture, playful display, atmospheric tone, dry brush, rough edges, monoline-ish, uneven baseline, tall ascenders.
A hand-drawn print face with dry, slightly scratchy strokes and softly irregular contours. Stems tend toward a monoline feel but show natural pressure variations and occasional thickened joins, creating a lightly textured, ink-on-paper look. Proportions are narrow overall with tall, spindly ascenders and descenders, and lowercase forms sit small relative to capitals, producing a distinctly low, compact x-height. Letterfit and rhythm are intentionally uneven, with varied widths and subtly inconsistent terminal shapes that reinforce the handmade character.
Best suited to display settings where texture and personality are assets: posters, book or zine covers, packaging labels, event titles, and short quotes. It can also work for playful UI headings or branding accents, but the small x-height and irregular rhythm make it less comfortable for long passages at small sizes.
The font conveys an informal, quirky tone—part vintage note, part storybook caption. Its roughened stroke edges and lively irregularity feel human and approachable, with a slightly eerie or magical tint when set in larger sizes, as in the sample pangrams.
The design appears intended to mimic quick hand lettering with a dry pen or brush, prioritizing character and spontaneity over strict consistency. Its narrow, tall silhouettes and rough stroke texture aim to add atmosphere and a handcrafted feel to headlines and short-form text.
Capitals have a simple, drawn-with-a-pen construction with occasional calligraphic flare (notably on rounded forms), while lowercase stays minimal and sparse, emphasizing vertical strokes and small counters. Numerals follow the same hand-rendered logic, with open, sketchy curves and inconsistent stroke endings that read as intentionally imperfect.