Wacky Bohi 13 is a bold, narrow, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, logos, book covers, playful, quirky, whimsical, retro, add personality, create whimsy, stand out, retro charm, swashy, curly terminals, flared strokes, soft corners, bouncy rhythm.
A decorative serif with strong thick–thin modulation and a lively, uneven rhythm across the alphabet. Strokes often end in tapered, flared, or curled terminals, and several letters introduce looped or teardrop-like counters (notably in forms such as O/Q and some lowercase). Uppercase construction mixes relatively straight stems with rounded bowls, while the lowercase leans more calligraphic, showing occasional swashes, single-storey forms, and asymmetrical joins. Numerals follow the same high-contrast logic, with some digits featuring pronounced curves and stylized terminals that give them a hand-drawn, display-oriented presence.
Best suited to display settings where personality is an asset—posters, headlines, titles, packaging, and brand marks that want an eccentric, handcrafted feel. It can work well for short editorial callouts or playful signage, especially at medium to large sizes where its curls and contrast read clearly.
The overall tone is lighthearted and offbeat, with a slightly vintage, storybook flavor. Its curling details and bouncy letterforms communicate friendliness and whimsy rather than neutrality, making the text feel animated and characterful.
The type appears designed to inject character through unexpected terminals, looping counters, and a calligraphic serif vocabulary, prioritizing distinctiveness over restraint. It aims for a memorable, theatrical texture that stands out quickly in titles and branding.
The design deliberately breaks strict uniformity: widths and interior shapes vary noticeably from glyph to glyph, and some characters introduce distinctive curls or loops that create strong visual hooks. This makes the texture engaging in short bursts, but the same features also raise the typographic “noise” level in longer passages.