Hollow Other Ofke 2 is a regular weight, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, packaging, headlines, kids, event promos, playful, whimsical, handmade, retro, festive, texture, novelty, handcrafted, decorative, memorable branding, dotted, cutout, rounded, irregular, display.
A lively, hand-drawn display face with rounded, slightly uneven strokes and a consistent system of interior cutouts. Many stems and bowls carry small punched “dot” holes and occasional larger voids, creating a hollowed, stencil-like texture while keeping the outer silhouettes bold and legible. Curves are soft and slightly wobbly, terminals are rounded, and proportions vary from glyph to glyph in a way that feels intentionally crafted rather than mechanical. The lowercase is simple and open, with single-storey forms and minimal detailing, while numerals follow the same perforated treatment for a cohesive set.
Best suited to display settings where its cutout texture can be appreciated—posters, invitations, product packaging, merch graphics, and short headlines. It can also work for playful branding and kid-oriented materials, while longer passages benefit from generous size and spacing to keep the interior dots from competing with counters.
The dotted knockouts and gently imperfect outlines give the font a cheerful, crafty personality with a vintage sign-painting and party-poster energy. It reads friendly and informal, leaning toward charming and quirky rather than strict or technical.
The design appears intended to deliver a hand-crafted, decorative look by combining rounded letterforms with a distinctive dotted knockout motif. The goal seems to be a memorable, textured display voice that evokes perforation or punched lettering while staying readable in short bursts.
The interior perforations create a strong texture at larger sizes and can visually densify in small text, especially where multiple dot cutouts run along narrow vertical strokes. The overall rhythm is bouncy, and the slightly irregular contours add character and motion across lines of text.