Hollow Other Ebve 1 is a bold, normal width, very high contrast, italic, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Core Sans BR', 'Core Sans N SC', and 'Core Sans NR' by S-Core (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, packaging, social ads, logos, playful, handmade, retro, friendly, casual, standout display, hand-lettered feel, decorative texture, youthful tone, rounded, soft, brushy, bouncy, outlined.
A slanted, brush-script-like display face with thick, rounded strokes and irregular, hand-drawn contours. The forms are built from confident marker-style gestures, but each stroke is partially carved out with narrow internal knockouts, creating a lively hollowed/outlined effect rather than a solid fill. Terminals are soft and bulbous, curves are generous, and spacing feels open and informal; capitals are broad and slightly condensed in places while lowercase keeps a simple, single-storey construction. Numerals match the same rounded, cutout-stroke logic, maintaining consistent weight and a buoyant baseline rhythm.
Best suited to short, prominent text where the cutout detailing can be appreciated—headlines, posters, product packaging, social graphics, and playful logo wordmarks. It can also work for pull quotes or section headers, but the decorative knockouts suggest using it at comfortable display sizes for maximum clarity.
The font reads upbeat and approachable, with a crafty, doodled energy that feels conversational rather than formal. The internal cutouts add sparkle and motion, giving it a lighthearted, poster-friendly personality with a hint of vintage sign lettering.
Likely designed to emulate bold marker lettering while adding a distinctive hollowed-out stroke accent for extra visual interest. The goal appears to be a friendly, energetic display style that stands out quickly and feels hand-crafted.
The hollowed stroke treatment is consistently applied across the alphabet and figures, producing visible interior highlights that can become a key stylistic feature at larger sizes. The italic slant and variable stroke shapes contribute to a dynamic texture in lines of text, especially in mixed-case settings.