Shadow Tivi 3 is a very light, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, packaging, music covers, futuristic, delicate, airy, technical, stylized, sci‑fi display, stylized signage, decorative texture, lightweight impact, monoline, rounded corners, cutout details, inline feel, high spacing.
A very thin, monoline display face built from open contours and frequent internal cut-ins that create a hollowed, stenciled impression. Strokes are consistently light with gently rounded terminals, while many forms show small notches and breaks that read like an offset/echo line rather than fully closed outlines. Proportions are clean and geometric—round letters are near-circular, verticals stay straight, and diagonals are crisp—giving the alphabet a precise, engineered rhythm. Numerals and capitals feel slightly more architectural, while the lowercase keeps similarly narrow, open shapes with minimal joining and ample white space.
Best suited for large-scale settings such as headlines, posters, logotypes, and brand marks where the hollow/echo detailing can be appreciated. It can work well on packaging, editorial openers, and event or music artwork that benefits from a futuristic, technical mood, especially when printed or displayed with strong background contrast.
The overall tone is sleek and futuristic, with a fragile, airy presence that feels more like a schematic drawing than solid lettering. The cutout and shadowlike echoes add a sci‑fi signage character—cool, modern, and slightly experimental rather than warm or traditional.
The design appears intended to deliver a lightweight, high-tech display aesthetic by combining geometric skeleton forms with deliberate breaks and offset-like inner cuts, producing a shadowed, hollow look without relying on heavy stroke weight.
In text, the open construction and tiny cut-ins can visually soften edges and introduce sparkle, but the extremely light stroke presence means contrast against the background and generous sizing are important. The design’s repeated micro-breaks create a consistent texture across lines, making it read more as a decorative voice than a neutral workhorse.