Solid Bohy 7 is a very light, normal width, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: logotypes, headlines, posters, magazine, branding, art deco, avant-garde, fashion, editorial, futuristic, visual impact, experimental display, geometric concept, signature identity, monoline, geometric, stencil-like, ball terminals, hairline.
A geometric display face built from hairline strokes and bold, filled circular forms that frequently replace bowls and counters. Many letters alternate between ultra-thin monoline construction and heavy, solid circles or semicircles, creating a pronounced light/dark rhythm. Curves are clean and near-perfectly circular, while straight strokes are long, crisp, and minimal, with occasional crossbars rendered as short horizontal ticks. The result is a deliberately irregular texture across the alphabet, with some glyphs reading as open outlines and others as collapsed, inked shapes.
Best suited to logos, large headlines, editorial cover lines, posters, and branding where its circle-and-hairline construction can be appreciated at size. It can work for short phrases and punchy titling, particularly in fashion, gallery, or nightlife contexts, but is less appropriate for long-form reading.
The font conveys a sleek, stylized sophistication with a hint of playful experimentation. Its stark contrast and circular motifs evoke vintage-modern Art Deco cues while still feeling contemporary and graphic. Overall it reads as bold in concept rather than weight, projecting a curated, high-design attitude.
The design appears intended to explore extreme contrast through a modular vocabulary of hairline strokes and filled circular counters, prioritizing graphic impact over conventional typographic continuity. It aims to create a signature texture and memorable letterforms that stand out in display settings.
Because many letters rely on filled circles and very fine connectors, spacing and readability can shift dramatically from character to character—especially in continuous text. The numeral set follows the same idea, mixing hairline outlines with solid circular masses, which makes it visually distinctive but highly display-oriented.