Jesus is Good News Vol-3: A Warm, Faith-Filled Display Font for Your Brand
Last Tuesday, I spent two hours reworking the label for our small-batch lavender soy candles—again. Not because the scent changed, but because the old font just didn’t *feel* like us anymore. It was generic. Slightly stiff. Like it was whispering “product” instead of “peace.” That’s when I remembered Jesus is Good News Vol-3. Not as a religious statement first—but as a design decision that finally clicked.
This isn’t a font for body text or spreadsheets. Jesus is Good News Vol-3 is a hand-crafted display typeface with gentle curves, soft contrast, and quiet confidence. Think of it as the visual equivalent of a kind smile or a handwritten note tucked into a gift box—warm, intentional, and quietly uplifting. It’s designed to carry short, meaningful phrases: “You Are Loved,” “Grace Over Perfection,” “Breathe Deeply,” or yes—even “Jesus is Good News.” Its personality lands somewhere between heartfelt and timeless—not flashy, not fussy, just deeply human.
What makes it especially practical for small business owners? It arrives as a complete digital toolkit: one clean PDF guide, plus SVG, PNG, EPS, DXF, and JPEG files—all in a single ZIP. No physical item, no shipping delay—just instant access to versatile design assets you can drop straight into Canva, Adobe Illustrator, Cricut Design Space, or Silhouette Studio. Whether you’re printing on kraft paper tags, cutting vinyl for mugs, layering text over Instagram Reels, or prepping a Shopify banner, the file formats cover nearly every use case in T-Shirt Designs, packaging, and Graphics for physical and digital goods.
I used it first on our candle jar labels—replacing a generic script with the “Good News” phrase in the SVG version. Instant difference. The letters sat comfortably beside our minimalist botanical line art, and customers started mentioning how “calm” and “thoughtful” the packaging felt. Then came the thank-you cards slipped into online orders—printed on textured cardstock, the JPEG file scaled perfectly for 4×6 layouts. Even our café neighbor (yes, the one with the chalkboard menu) borrowed the PNG for a weekend special board—and told me three regulars asked where she got the “soothing font.”
Here’s what works beautifully with Jesus is Good News Vol-3:
- Logo design—especially for faith-based coaches, wellness practitioners, or handmade brands rooted in kindness
- Product labels & packaging—candle jars, skincare boxes, tea tins, boutique garment tags
- Social media graphics—Instagram quote posts, Pinterest affirmations, Facebook event banners
- Printed collateral—menus, flyers, postcards, stickers, and even embroidered patches (using the SVG or DXF)
- Digital ads & web banners—its high-contrast, open letterforms stay legible even at smaller sizes on mobile screens
Typography shapes first impressions faster than we realize. A rushed or mismatched font can unintentionally signal “this wasn’t thought through.” But something like Jesus is Good News Vol-3 adds quiet professionalism—not by shouting, but by holding space. It supports your message instead of competing with it. That consistency across touchpoints—label, website, social post, thank-you card—builds recognition without saying a word about your brand values. Customers begin to associate that gentle rhythm of letterforms with care, sincerity, and intentionality.
For readability, lean into its strengths: it shines best at larger sizes (24pt and up for print, 36px+ for web), especially for headlines, quotes, and logo lockups. On small product labels or mobile thumbnails, keep phrases short—three to five words max—and avoid tight tracking. I tested it on a 1.5-inch sticker for our soap bars: “Rest Here” worked perfectly; “You Are Held In Perfect Love” didn’t. Trust the font’s natural voice—it’s meant to be felt, not filled.
Pairing it is intuitive. Try Jesus is Good News Vol-3 with a clean, neutral sans serif (like Montserrat or Inter) for contrast and clarity—perfect for ingredient lists under a bold “Breathe Easy” header on a candle label. Or soften it further with a delicate serif (think Playfair Display Light) for wedding-related faith goods or boutique stationery. Avoid pairing it with other decorative scripts—it’s got presence enough on its own.
Before using it commercially—especially on merchandise, client projects, or digital templates—double-check the licensing. This is a commercial font, meaning it’s cleared for use in products you sell, including T-Shirt Designs, printed packaging, and digital downloads. No hidden restrictions, no need to credit—but always verify included features: no alternate characters or ligatures are bundled here, and multilingual support is limited to basic Latin characters (A–Z, numbers, common punctuation). That’s more than enough for most small-brand needs—and keeps things refreshingly simple.
Truth is, upgrading your typography doesn’t require a full rebrand. Sometimes it’s just swapping out one font for another that breathes with your mission. With Jesus is Good News Vol-3, you’re not just choosing a typeface—you’re choosing a tone. One that says, gently but firmly: this matters. You matter. And your brand deserves to reflect that, clearly and kindly.





