Inverted Miba 2 is a bold, very narrow, very high contrast, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, album art, flyers, packaging, punk, cutout, zine, grunge, playful, diy texture, analog print, attention grab, graphic impact, condensed, distressed, irregular, stencil-like, collage.
A condensed, all-caps-forward display face built from tall rectangular silhouettes with knocked-out letterforms. The design relies on strong verticals and tight counters, with interior shapes appearing as irregular cutouts that create a rough, hand-made edge. Stroke behavior is intentionally inconsistent: curves and joins show waviness, nicks, and pinched areas, producing a jittery rhythm across words. Numerals and lowercase follow the same tall, blocky proportions, maintaining a strong rectangular footprint and compact spacing feel.
Best suited for large-scale display applications such as posters, event flyers, album/merch graphics, and punchy headlines where its cutout texture can be appreciated. It can also work for short brand marks or packaging callouts when you want a gritty, collage-like voice rather than a neutral typographic tone.
The overall tone is raw and DIY, evoking photocopied flyers, ransom-note collage, and punk/zine graphics. Its inverted, cutout construction reads as rebellious and attention-grabbing, with a slightly chaotic energy that feels more expressive than refined.
The design appears intended to mimic an inverted print or paper-cut process: solid blocks with letterforms carved out, then distressed to introduce analog imperfection. The narrow, tall construction prioritizes impact and density, aiming for a high-energy display texture that stands out in bold, graphic compositions.
Because much of the letter identity is defined by interior knockouts, readability depends heavily on size and contrast; smaller settings may cause counters and distinctive details to fill in visually. The narrow build and tall proportions create a strong vertical cadence that can feel loud and urgent in lines of text.