Inline Ebwi 13 is a regular weight, wide, low contrast, reverse italic, tall x-height font.
Keywords: display, headlines, logos, posters, packaging, futuristic, tech, retro, speedy, geometric, sci-fi feel, display impact, tech aesthetic, motion cue, geometric clarity, outlined, rounded corners, monoline, angled, expanded.
A geometric, expanded sans with rounded-rectangle construction and a consistent double-line/inline drawing that creates hollow interior space. Strokes behave like parallel rails rather than filled forms, with smooth outer corners and occasional sharp, chamfer-like joins on diagonals. Letterforms are slightly slanted in a reverse-italic direction, giving a forward-moving rhythm despite the rigid geometry. Counters are generally open and rectangular, terminals are clean and squared, and the overall impression is crisp, schematic, and tightly systematized across caps, lowercase, and numerals.
Best suited to display typography such as headlines, poster titles, logotypes, UI/tech branding, and short promotional copy where the inline construction can read clearly. It can also work for large-format signage or event graphics, especially in high-contrast color settings that emphasize its hollow, outlined structure.
The inline, rail-like strokes and rounded-square geometry evoke digital displays, sci‑fi interfaces, and late-20th-century techno styling. Its reverse slant adds a sense of motion and edge, while the consistent outline treatment keeps the tone cool, engineered, and contemporary. Overall it reads as playful-tech rather than formal, suited to energetic, synthetic aesthetics.
The design appears intended to merge a geometric sans foundation with an inline, schematic treatment that suggests circuitry, tubing, or neon-trace lettering. The reverse slant and expanded width reinforce a dynamic, futuristic voice aimed at attention-grabbing display use rather than neutral text setting.
Because the design is built from open strokes and interior cut-ins, it tends to appear lighter than a solid face at the same size, and fine details become more prominent at larger settings. The widened proportions and tight, angular diagonals can create strong word-shapes, but also call for comfortable tracking and generous line spacing in longer strings.