Outline Tili 1 is a light, wide, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logotypes, packaging, invitations, art deco, fashion, editorial, theatrical, vintage, decorative display, luxury tone, vintage revival, title emphasis, ornamental texture, high-contrast feel, inline detailing, display serif, ornamental, hairline.
This typeface is a decorative serif with an outline-and-inline construction: letterforms are drawn with a thin outer contour and an additional internal line that creates a double-stroked, hollow impression. Strokes are predominantly hairline-thin with crisp, sharp terminals and small wedge-like serifs, giving the shapes a refined, airy presence. Curves are smooth and geometric-leaning, while verticals stay clean and straight; counters remain generous due to the open, outlined build. The overall rhythm is elegant and slightly flamboyant, with consistent internal striping across caps, lowercase, and numerals.
Best suited for display use such as headlines, posters, magazine covers, branding marks, and packaging where the outlined/inline detailing can be appreciated. It can also work for invitations and event materials that benefit from a formal, ornamental tone, but it is less appropriate for long-form body text at small sizes due to its delicate construction.
The font reads as glamorous and stylized, evoking classic display typography associated with Art Deco-era luxury, fashion, and title treatments. Its hollowed, lined construction adds a theatrical, jewelry-like sparkle that feels formal yet playful when set large.
The design appears intended to provide a high-impact, decorative serif voice that combines classic proportions with an eye-catching hollow/inline treatment. It prioritizes elegance and visual texture for titling and branding rather than plain readability.
In text settings the internal inline detail becomes a dominant texture, so spacing and line length matter; the design rewards generous size and breathing room to keep the fine contours from visually clashing. Numerals follow the same outlined, decorative logic and pair naturally with the caps for titling.