Outline Lino 10 is a regular weight, narrow, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logotypes, packaging, signage, retro, technical, playful, futuristic, industrial, wireframe look, retro tech, display impact, modular forms, lightness, monoline, rounded corners, inline detail, double-stroke, geometric.
A monoline outline face built from rounded-rectangle geometry and softened corners, with a consistent inline channel that creates a double-contour effect throughout the alphabet and figures. Strokes stay even and low-contrast, while corners often square off with gentle radii, giving letters a modular, engineered feel. Curves (C, G, O, Q) resolve into squarish bowls rather than true circles, and joins remain clean and uniform, producing a steady rhythm across caps, lowercase, and numerals.
Best suited for display applications where the outline can read cleanly: headlines, posters, branding marks, packaging callouts, and signage. It also works well for UI/tech-themed graphics, titling, and short emphatic text where the wireframe look adds character without requiring heavy weight.
The overall tone reads retro-futuristic and technical, like labeling from mid-century instruments or arcade-era graphics, but with a friendly, playful edge due to the rounded terminals and open outline construction. The hollow structure makes it feel light and airy, with a neon-sign or wireframe impression in larger settings.
The design appears intended to deliver a distinctive outlined, double-contour aesthetic using a consistent rounded-rectangular construction system. It prioritizes a cohesive, engineered silhouette and a recognizable inline detail that evokes vintage technical lettering and futuristic display typography.
The outline construction and internal channeling create strong visual texture; counters and apertures can appear busy at small sizes, but become a distinctive signature when given room. Numerals follow the same rounded-rectilinear logic, with clear, sign-painter-like silhouettes that match the uppercase. Spacing appears designed for display clarity rather than dense text composition.