Hollow Other Kebu 5 is a regular weight, wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logotypes, packaging, event flyers, retro, playful, techy, graphic, display impact, neon effect, graphic texture, retro titling, inline, outlined, rounded, layered, blocky.
A bold, rounded sans structure is built from open outlines and multiple concentric inline contours, creating a layered, hollow look. Corners are softly squared, curves are generous, and terminals are generally blunt, giving the alphabet a sturdy, sign-like geometry. The internal linework follows the outer shapes with consistent spacing, producing a striped, maze-like rhythm; in some letters the contours intentionally break or taper, adding a slightly irregular, hand-drawn edge while staying visually cohesive. Counters are large and the overall set reads as wide and spacious, with simple, blocky proportions that favor display clarity over fine detail.
This font is well suited to headlines, posters, and branding moments where a distinctive outlined texture can carry the design. It can work effectively for logotypes, packaging accents, and event or nightlife materials, especially when paired with solid fills or simple companion typefaces. In longer copy it becomes visually busy, so it’s best used for short statements, labels, and display-scale typography.
The repeated inline contours evoke vintage neon tubing, arcade graphics, and 1970s–80s titling, giving the face a nostalgic but energetic tone. Its hollow construction feels airy and animated, while the layered lines add a technical, schematic flavor. Overall it communicates playful confidence and a bold, decorative presence.
The design appears intended as a decorative display face that transforms a straightforward rounded sans into a more attention-grabbing, hollow, multi-line construction. The concentric inline treatment is meant to add depth and motion without introducing contrast, turning familiar letterforms into a patterned graphic element.
Because the design relies on multiple thin outlines, it reads best at larger sizes where the inner contours don’t visually merge. The layered strokes create strong texture in paragraphs, making it more suitable for short bursts of text than for continuous reading.