Print Nurih 3 is a regular weight, very narrow, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, packaging, headlines, branding, social media, casual, handmade, playful, quirky, retro, hand lettering, casual voice, space saving, organic texture, brushy, textured, condensed, tall, bouncy.
A tall, condensed handwritten print style with a consistent rightward slant and lively, uneven rhythm. Strokes feel brush- or marker-drawn, with subtly rough edges, occasional swelling, and tapered terminals that create a natural, drawn-on-paper texture. Counters are generally small and vertical, with simplified forms and slightly irregular baselines and widths that keep the texture organic while remaining broadly legible. Numerals and capitals share the same narrow, upright architecture and hand-rendered inconsistency, reinforcing a cohesive, sketch-like system.
Best suited to display applications where a handmade voice is desirable, such as posters, packaging callouts, brand accents, menu headings, and social media graphics. It can also work for short subheads or pull quotes when you want a casual, human feel, but the textured strokes and condensed forms are more effective at medium-to-large sizes than in long, small body copy.
The font conveys an informal, personable tone—quick, energetic, and a bit quirky. Its narrow, slanted stance and brushy texture evoke handmade signage and retro note-taking, giving text a friendly, conversational presence rather than a polished corporate feel.
The design appears intended to mimic fast, confident hand lettering with a brushy tool, balancing recognizability with intentionally imperfect texture. Its condensed, slanted construction suggests a goal of fitting impactful text into narrow spaces while maintaining an energetic, handcrafted personality.
Spacing appears on the tighter side, and the narrow proportions create a strong vertical color in paragraphs. The roughened stroke edges and occasional asymmetry read as intentional, adding character at larger sizes while potentially becoming busy at very small sizes.