Outline Ryvo 9 is a very light, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, signage, logos, sportswear, technical, retro, sporty, utilitarian, clean, display outline, signage clarity, graphic branding, retro-tech feel, monoline, rounded, squared, boxed, geometric.
A monoline outline sans with squared, rounded-corner construction and consistent stroke thickness. Forms are built from straight segments and broad radii, producing boxy counters and softly chamfered corners rather than sharp joins. Proportions are sturdy and compact, with simple, low-detail terminals and clear, schematic letter shapes; diagonals (V/W/X/Y) keep a crisp, engineered feel while curved letters (O/C/G/Q) read as rounded rectangles. The outlining is even and open, giving the face a lightweight presence while preserving strong silhouette definition at display sizes.
Best suited to headlines and large-format applications where the outline can remain legible and the geometric silhouettes can carry the design. It works well for branding marks, packaging callouts, signage, and sports or tech-themed graphics, especially where a lightweight, non-filled letterform adds visual hierarchy without heavy color mass.
The overall tone feels technical and modern with a distinct retro-industrial edge, reminiscent of signage, athletic lettering, and interface labeling. Its clean geometry and open interiors project clarity and restraint, while the outline treatment adds a decorative, “built” character.
The design appears intended as a clean, modular display outline that maintains strong readability through simplified geometry and consistent corner rounding. The emphasis is on a bold silhouette without fill, enabling a graphic, badge-like look that pairs well with modern layouts and retro-technical themes.
Uppercase shapes lean toward squarish geometry (notably E/F/T and the boxy bowls in B/D/P/R), while the lowercase remains straightforward and functional with single-storey forms where applicable. Numerals share the same rounded-rectangle logic, helping the set feel cohesive in mixed alphanumeric strings.