Hollow Other Kena 2 is a bold, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, album art, horror titles, event flyers, spooky, handmade, grunge, playful, punk, expressive display, hand-drawn texture, horror tone, diy aesthetic, graphic impact, irregular, rough-edged, outline fill, wobbly, organic.
This font uses chunky, uneven strokes with a hollowed/knocked-out interior that reads like a hand-drawn outline trapped inside a heavier outer contour. Edges are deliberately wobbly and slightly jagged, with inconsistent curves and corners that create a lively, imperfect rhythm. Counters are often small or distorted, terminals vary in shape, and the overall drawing feels slightly compressed and hand-carved rather than mechanically constructed. Letter widths fluctuate noticeably, enhancing the handmade texture and giving words a bouncy, irregular color on the line.
Best suited to short display settings where texture and personality are the priority—posters, titles, packaging callouts, album covers, and themed event flyers. It can work for logos or wordmarks in contexts that welcome an intentionally rough, handmade finish, but it is less appropriate for long-form reading or small UI text.
The overall tone is mischievous and eerie, with a comic-horror energy that feels suited to Halloween, B-movie titles, or zine-style graphics. Its rough, hollowed texture suggests something scratched, stamped, or cut out, producing a rebellious, DIY attitude rather than a polished display voice.
The design appears intended to deliver an expressive, hand-rendered display look by combining heavy outer strokes with irregular inner knockouts, creating a bold silhouette with built-in texture. The variable letter widths and intentionally imperfect contours reinforce a DIY, illustrative presence that prioritizes character over strict typographic regularity.
The hollow interior detailing is consistent enough to function as a signature texture, but it also increases visual noise, so clarity drops quickly at small sizes or in dense paragraphs. The numerals and lowercase maintain the same cut-out treatment, helping mixed-case settings stay cohesive.