Solid Sohy 2 is a very bold, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, logos, packaging, album art, playful, retro, graphic, chunky, futuristic, display impact, graphic identity, stylized legibility, modular system, geometric, stencil-like, faceted, modular, high-impact.
A heavy, geometric display face built from solid, mostly closed forms with frequent cut-ins and notches that suggest a stencil or modular construction. Curves are broad and circular while straight segments terminate in crisp, angular facets, creating a rhythm of rounded masses interrupted by triangular bites and stepped joints. Counters are largely collapsed, so letter recognition relies on outer silhouettes, with consistent thick strokes, tight interior spacing, and a compact, blocky footprint across uppercase and lowercase.
Best suited to large sizes where its closed counters and carved notches remain clear: posters, splashy headlines, logo marks, packaging, and bold editorial or music/entertainment graphics. It can also work for short UI labels or category headers when high impact is more important than continuous readability.
The overall tone is bold and playful with a strong retro-futurist flavor, reading as graphic, toy-like, and intentionally abstract. Its sharp wedges and closed bowls add a slightly mysterious, coded feel, like signage meant to be seen quickly rather than read comfortably at length.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum visual presence through solid silhouettes and distinctive negative cutouts, turning familiar letterforms into graphic symbols. It prioritizes style and instant recognition at display sizes, offering a cohesive, modular look that stands out in branding and titling.
Uppercase shapes lean toward emblematic silhouettes, while lowercase maintains the same construction logic with simplified joins and minimal apertures. The numerals follow the same solid, carved-out approach, producing strong pictographic figures that pair well with the angular punctuation-like cuts seen throughout the alphabet.