Hollow Other Abfe 6 is a very bold, normal width, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: children’s titles, packaging, stickers, posters, party invites, playful, bubbly, cartoon, friendly, whimsical, fun display, characterful branding, youth appeal, novelty texture, rounded, blobby, soft, bulbous, chunky.
A heavy, rounded display face built from inflated, blobby strokes and soft terminals, giving each character a pillowy silhouette. Counters are small and irregular, and many glyphs include glossy, droplet-like internal cutouts that read as highlights rather than consistent geometric voids. Curves dominate throughout, with simplified joins and minimal sharp corners; proportions vary noticeably from glyph to glyph, adding a hand-drawn, organic rhythm. Overall spacing appears generous, and the chunky forms maintain clear letter identities even with reduced internal openings.
Best suited to short headlines, logos, product names, and attention-grabbing captions where its bubbly shapes and glossy cutouts can read clearly. It works well for children’s materials, playful branding, seasonal promos, and display applications on packaging or social graphics. For longer passages, larger point sizes and ample leading help preserve readability.
The tone is cheerful and lighthearted, with a toy-like, cartoon sensibility. The shiny cutouts add a tactile, sticker-or-gel-pen feel that leans fun and approachable rather than formal or technical. It suggests playful packaging, kid-centric content, and upbeat pop aesthetics.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum personality through soft, inflated letterforms paired with decorative internal cutouts that simulate shine or hollowness. It prioritizes charm and visual punch over neutral text utility, aiming for a friendly, animated presence in display settings.
The internal knockouts are intentionally inconsistent in size and placement, creating a lively texture across lines of text. The bold massing makes it impactful at large sizes, while the small counters and decorative cutouts can start to compete with legibility as sizes shrink, especially in dense copy.