Outline Mihy 9 is a light, wide, low contrast, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logos, posters, packaging, album art, futuristic, techy, arcade, schematic, retro, display impact, tech motif, retro futurism, graphic identity, geometric, monoline, angular, inline, square.
A geometric outline face built from monoline contours with a distinctive inner inline that traces the outer shape, creating a double-stroked, labyrinth-like effect. Letterforms are mostly squared and angular with chamfered corners, straight terminals, and consistent stroke spacing that reads like a technical drawing. Counters tend to be rectangular, curves are minimized, and diagonals appear selectively in forms like A, K, V, W, X, and Y. The lowercase maintains a tall x-height with simplified, boxy constructions, while figures follow the same outlined, stepped geometry for a cohesive alphanumeric set.
Best suited to display use such as headlines, logotypes, posters, and branding where its outlined, multi-line construction can be appreciated. It also works well for tech, gaming, sci‑fi, and retro-themed packaging or cover art, and for short UI or label elements at larger sizes where fine interior lines won’t collapse.
The overall tone feels futuristic and game-like, with a retro digital/arcade flavor and a schematic, engineered crispness. The repeated inner contour adds a sense of motion and depth, giving headlines a neon-sign or circuitry vibe without relying on filled weight.
The design intention appears to be a bold, graphic outline alphabet that conveys a futuristic, engineered aesthetic through squared geometry and a signature inline contour. It prioritizes distinctive texture and visual identity over continuous-reading neutrality, making it ideal as a decorative display voice.
Because the design is strictly outlined with internal inlining, it benefits from generous sizing and spacing where the internal detail can stay legible. The square proportions and stepped turns produce strong rhythm in all-caps settings, while the lowercase remains intentionally constructed and stylized rather than traditional text-serif or humanist.