Solid Boti 3 is a light, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, packaging, logos, playful, quirky, mod, graphic, friendly, distinctiveness, playfulness, modernity, graphic texture, rounded, geometric, monoline, soft terminals, ink-trap feel.
A rounded, geometric sans with a mostly monoline stroke and smooth, softened terminals. Many bowls and counters are intentionally collapsed into solid forms, creating bold circular and teardrop-like masses inside otherwise light outlines. Curves are clean and consistent, while joins and apertures vary for a slightly irregular rhythm; several letters show notch-like cut-ins that suggest an ink-trap or cutout logic. Overall proportions are compact and tidy, with open, simple forms offset by the recurring filled-in interior shapes.
Best suited to headlines and short phrases where the solid-counter motif can provide recognizable texture. It can work well for branding, packaging, and logo wordmarks that want a modern, playful signature, and for posters or social graphics where a quirky geometric tone is desirable.
The repeated solid bowls give the typeface a whimsical, toy-like personality that reads as modern and graphic. It feels cheerful and slightly eccentric—more about visual character than neutrality—while still staying legible at display sizes. The contrast between airy strokes and heavy internal blobs adds a playful, punchy cadence.
The font appears designed to reinterpret a clean geometric sans through a bold internal-fill gimmick, turning counters into graphic spots to create instant recognition. The aim seems to balance simple construction with an irregular, novelty texture that stands out in display typography.
The design relies on a consistent motif: circular counters become solid dots in many glyphs and numerals, which increases texture and creates a distinctive spotted pattern across words. Curved letters (like O/Q and several lowercase rounds) appear especially emblematic due to the near-perfect filled circles, while straighter letters remain spare and minimalist for contrast.