Hollow Other Onku 10 is a regular weight, wide, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, signage, kids media, playful, carnival, retro, novelty, crafty, decorative texture, festive display, signage feel, branded headlines, dotted, inline, stencil-like, geometric, rounded.
A wide, rounded sans with uniform stroke widths and softened terminals, built from simple geometric construction. Each stroke is hollowed by a consistent pattern of small circular perforations that run along the interior of the letterforms, creating an inline, cut-out effect while keeping a solid outer contour. Curves are smooth and fairly circular, counters are open and legible, and joins stay clean with minimal flare. The dotted knockout detail remains consistent across caps, lowercase, and numerals, giving the face a strong decorative rhythm even at text sizes.
Best suited to display applications where the perforated inline detail can be appreciated: posters, event graphics, packaging, labels, storefront or wayfinding accents, and playful branding. It can also work for short pull quotes or section headers, but is less ideal for long-form reading where the internal texture may become visually busy.
The perforated, marquee-like texture gives the type a lighthearted, handmade feel reminiscent of signage, craft cutouts, and festive display lettering. It reads friendly and upbeat rather than formal, with a novelty character that draws attention through pattern and texture more than through sharp contrast or calligraphic motion.
The design appears intended to provide a friendly geometric sans foundation enhanced with a distinctive perforated knockout motif, delivering instant decoration without relying on heavy weight or complex ornament. The consistent dot pattern suggests a focus on themed display work—evoking marquee lights, punched paper, or craft-cut lettering—while keeping the underlying forms straightforward and readable.
The interior dot pattern can visually darken at small sizes as the perforations begin to merge into texture; it is most effective when given enough size or printing resolution for the cutouts to stay distinct. The wide proportions and rounded shapes help maintain clarity in mixed-case settings, while the decorative inline detail remains the primary identifying feature.