Hollow Other Kefi 4 is a very light, wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logotypes, tech branding, game ui, digital, architectural, technical, playful, retro, modular experiment, retro digital, structural texture, decorative display, monoline, outlined, grid-based, modular, pixelated.
A modular, monoline display face built from rectilinear outlines that snap to an underlying square grid. Strokes are rendered as hollow, single-line frames with frequent internal crossbars and right-angled joints, creating a tiled or scaffold-like texture inside each character. The overall construction is geometric and boxy, with mostly flat terminals, squared counters, and stepped diagonals in letters like N, Z, and K. Spacing and widths vary by glyph, and the interior segmentation produces a consistent rhythm of small rectangular compartments across the alphabet and figures.
This font is best suited to display settings such as headlines, posters, album art, and logotypes where the hollow grid detail can be appreciated. It can also work for tech-leaning branding, event graphics, or game/interface titles that benefit from a pixel/schematic aesthetic. For longer text, it will perform more reliably in short bursts or larger sizes due to the intricate interior segmentation.
The grid-and-outline construction gives the font a distinctly digital, schematic tone—somewhere between pixel graphics, circuit diagrams, and architectural drafting. Its airy interiors keep it light on the page while the repeated cell structure adds a quirky, game-like energy that reads as retro-tech and experimental rather than traditional.
The design appears intended to explore letterforms as modular constructions: characters are assembled from a consistent square framework while preserving recognizable silhouettes. By combining a hollow outline with an internal lattice, it aims to deliver a distinctive texture and a retro-digital voice without relying on heavy stroke weight.
The internal subdivisions are not purely uniform: some glyphs show irregular blocking or partial insets that increase the handmade-system feel while staying faithful to the underlying grid. At smaller sizes the interior lattice becomes the dominant texture, so the design reads best when the hollow structure has room to resolve.