Outline Orpi 1 is a very light, normal width, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, sports branding, apparel, packaging, sporty, retro, energetic, playful, dynamic, standout display, athletic tone, graphic layering, retro flavor, oblique, outlined, rounded, bold-leaning, cartoonish.
This is an oblique outline sans with a continuous outer contour and open counters throughout. The letterforms are built from rounded rectangles and softened corners, with a consistent stroke gap that reads cleanly at display sizes. Proportions skew slightly wide and the slant adds forward motion; curves (O, C, S) are smooth and inflated while diagonals (A, K, V, W, X, Y) are crisp and angular. Numerals follow the same inflated geometry, with notably round bowls on 0/6/8/9 and a simple, athletic "1".
Best suited for display settings where the outline effect can be appreciated: headlines, posters, event graphics, and sports or team-style branding. It also fits well on apparel, stickers, and packaging where a lively, retro-athletic voice is desired. For small UI text or dense paragraphs, the single-line outline may feel too delicate, but it performs strongly when given room and scale.
The overall tone feels sporty and upbeat, with a classic team-graphics energy. The outline construction gives it a light, airy presence while still reading as bold and attention-seeking due to the large interior space and chunky silhouettes. It comes across as friendly and slightly cartoon-like rather than formal or technical.
The design appears intended to deliver a fast, sporty impression using a uniform oblique angle and inflated, rounded geometry. By relying on an outline-only construction, it aims for a distinctive, lightweight impact that can layer over imagery or be filled/outlined in graphic treatments while keeping a cohesive, energetic silhouette.
Spacing and rhythm are even and regular, helping the outline forms stay legible in longer lines. The lowercase set mirrors the uppercase’s rounded-square construction; single-storey forms like a and g reinforce an informal, sign-paint/jersey feel. The italic angle is uniform across letters and figures, supporting a consistent forward-leaning texture.