Inverted Okfy 14 is a very bold, very narrow, very high contrast, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, signage, album art, industrial, cutout, poster, quirky, retro, graphic impact, tile system, sign look, pattern texture, stencil-like, condensed, modular, geometric, blocky.
A condensed, vertically oriented display face built from tall rectangular black tiles with the letterforms knocked out in white. The glyphs are monoline in feel but rendered through negative space, creating strong figure–ground contrast and a crisp cutout edge. Counters are tight and simplified, terminals are mostly flat, and curves are compact and squarish, giving a modular, sign-making rhythm. Overall spacing reads as tile-based with consistent vertical cadence, producing a uniform, columnar texture across words.
Best used for headlines, posters, packaging, and signage where strong contrast and a tiled silhouette can carry the layout. It also works well for short labels, badges, and album/cover art that benefits from a bold, cutout look; for longer passages, it’s most effective in brief, high-impact bursts.
The inverted cutout construction gives the font a punchy, poster-like attitude with an industrial and slightly playful tone. Its stark black-and-white presence feels suited to bold statements and graphic compositions where the typography doubles as pattern.
The design appears intended to merge type and shape: each glyph functions as a cutout inside a rigid vertical tile, prioritizing a striking, repeatable texture over conventional text neutrality. The consistent blocks suggest a system meant for punchy display settings and graphic lockups where the background–foreground inversion is a defining feature.
Because each character sits in a solid rectangular block, words form a continuous band of alternating black tiles and white cutouts, increasing impact but reducing subtlety at smaller sizes. Numerals and lowercase follow the same tiled construction, keeping the system coherent and highly graphic.