Outline Pawi 1 is a very light, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, packaging, signage, medieval, ornate, traditional, ceremonial, craftlike, historic flavor, decorative display, engraved look, ornamental titling, heritage branding, blackletter, gothic, outlined, angular, faceted.
An outlined blackletter-style design with crisp, angular construction and faceted joins. Strokes are drawn as clean contours with open interiors, giving each glyph a hollow, sign-like presence. Terminals often end in wedge and spur forms, and many curves are broken into shallow angles, creating a chiseled rhythm. Uppercase forms are compact and upright with strong vertical emphasis, while lowercase shows narrow counters, sharp shoulders, and consistent internal spacing; numerals follow the same outlined, beveled treatment for a cohesive set.
Best suited to display settings such as headlines, posters, album or event graphics, and heritage-themed branding. It can work well for logos, labels, and packaging where the outlined construction can be paired with color fills or effects, and where larger sizes preserve the interior detail.
The overall tone evokes medieval manuscripts, old-world signage, and ceremonial lettering. The outline treatment adds a decorative, display-forward feel that reads more like crafted engraving than everyday text, balancing historic gravitas with a lighter, airy footprint.
The design appears intended to translate classic blackletter forms into a lighter, outline-driven display face, retaining traditional proportions and ornamental spurs while making the texture feel less heavy through open interiors. It emphasizes historic character and strong silhouette for impactful titling.
The single-line contour makes fill and background interactions especially prominent, and the many corners and notches produce a lively texture at larger sizes. In longer passages the patterning is dense and rhythmic, with distinctive letter silhouettes that prioritize style over minimalism.