Outline Egha 3 is a regular weight, narrow, high contrast, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, packaging, kids branding, comics, playful, cartoon, handmade, bouncy, quirky, comic display, youth appeal, friendly branding, hand-drawn texture, headline impact, outlined, bubble, rounded, wobbly, irregular.
A lively outline display face built from rounded, hand-drawn contours with a deliberately uneven stroke and gently wobbling edges. Letterforms are compact and slightly condensed, with a buoyant baseline rhythm and frequent asymmetries that keep repeated shapes from feeling mechanical. Counters are open and simplified, terminals tend to be blunt, and curves are inflated into soft, cartoon-like volumes; the outline construction leaves the interiors mostly unfilled for an airy, poster-friendly look. Numerals match the same playful irregularity and chunky silhouette.
Best suited to short-form display work such as headlines, posters, event graphics, packaging callouts, and playful branding—especially where an outlined, cartoonish voice is desired. It can also work for badges, stickers, and social graphics, while long passages or small UI text may lose clarity due to the outline construction and intentionally irregular contours.
The overall tone is cheerful and informal, with a comic, kid-friendly energy. Its bubbly outlines and slightly off-kilter shapes suggest humor, approachability, and a handmade personality rather than precision or restraint.
The design appears intended to deliver a friendly, comic display voice through inflated shapes and hand-drawn outline contours, prioritizing personality and visual charm over typographic neutrality. Its condensed footprint and energetic rhythm aim to make titles and slogans feel bold and animated without relying on heavy fill.
Spacing feels intentionally loose and springy, and the irregular contour thickness creates a subtle hand-rendered texture that becomes more apparent at larger sizes. The outline-only build means it benefits from sufficient size or contrast against the background to keep the shapes from visually thinning.