Inline Rehu 6 is a bold, very wide, very high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, packaging, logos, signage, retro, showcard, playful, punchy, decorative, attention grabbing, ornamental detail, signage style, brandable display, inline, rounded, soft corners, monoline inset, posterish.
A wide, heavy display face built from rounded, softened shapes and high-impact verticals. Each glyph is filled and then split by a narrow inline that tracks the stroke path, creating a carved, double-stroke look; the inset is consistent and tends to sit slightly toward the inner side of curves and counters. Curves are generously rounded (notably in O/C/G and the bowls of B/P/R), while terminals are blunt and smooth, keeping edges friendly rather than sharp. The rhythm is compact and blocky with large counters, giving letters a sturdy silhouette that stays readable even with the decorative interior line. Numerals follow the same inflated, rounded construction, with open, airy apertures in 6/9 and a broad, stable 8.
Best suited to large-scale display work where the inline detail can be appreciated—headlines, posters, packaging fronts, storefront/signage, and logo wordmarks. It can also work for short callouts or labels, but the interior line detail is likely to diminish at small sizes.
The overall tone feels like classic signage and mid-century headline lettering: confident, upbeat, and a little theatrical. The inline detailing adds a crafted, marquee-like flair that reads as celebratory and attention-seeking rather than formal or text-oriented.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum shelf and poster impact through wide, rounded letterforms, while the inline cut gives it a distinctive ornamental signature for branding and titling.
Uppercase forms lean geometric with simplified joins, while the lowercase keeps similarly chunky proportions and round bowls, maintaining a cohesive texture across mixed-case setting. The inline occasionally creates small notches and tight interior pockets at joins (such as in M/W and some diagonals), contributing to a slightly hand-finished, stamped feel.