Outline Vaze 7 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, sports branding, packaging, playful, retro, bold, friendly, sporty, attention capture, retro flavor, graphic impact, branding, outlined, blocky, rounded, cartoonish, high-impact.
A blocky, geometric sans with a consistent outlined construction: each glyph is drawn as a thick outer contour with a clear inner counter, creating a hollow, stencil-like fill effect. Corners are largely squared-off but frequently eased with subtle rounding, especially where curves meet straight segments, giving the design a sturdy yet approachable rhythm. Proportions lean wide and stable in capitals, with compact joins and simplified forms (notably in diagonals and bowls) that keep the outline thickness visually even. The lowercase is similarly robust, with single-story shapes and generous counters that preserve clarity despite the double-line structure; numerals follow the same simplified, high-contrast-in-silhouette approach for strong legibility at display sizes.
Best suited for display typography where the outline effect can be appreciated—headlines, posters, event graphics, and bold brand marks. It also works well on packaging and labels where a graphic, high-impact wordmark is needed, and in sporty or retro-themed identity systems that benefit from a punchy, outlined look.
The overall tone is upbeat and attention-grabbing, combining the assertiveness of bold block lettering with a light, graphic feel created by the hollow interiors. It reads as retro and sporty—well suited to energetic, informal messaging—while remaining clean enough to feel modern in graphic applications.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum visual impact with a lightweight interior, using outlined strokes to create a bold silhouette without a solid fill. Its simplified geometry and friendly rounding suggest an emphasis on quick recognition and a fun, energetic voice for branding and promotional typography.
The outline-only drawing makes the type highly dependent on size and background: it will feel crisp and punchy at larger scales, while the interior openings and tight joins can visually thin out at small sizes. The design maintains a consistent contour logic across letters and numbers, producing a cohesive, sign-like presence in words and headlines.