Outline Mihy 10 is a very light, wide, low contrast, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, titles, packaging, techy, retro-futuristic, industrial, architectural, sci-fi, display impact, tech styling, retro sci-fi, geometric construct, blueprint feel, outlined, monoline, octagonal, beveled, angular.
A geometric outline display face built from straight, monoline contours with frequent chamfered corners and octagonal bowl constructions. Many glyphs include an inner inline/contour detail that creates a layered, schematic look rather than a single simple outline. Curves are largely rationalized into short segments, producing squared-off rounds in letters like O, C, G, and the numerals. Counters are open and generous, terminals are blunt, and the overall rhythm favors crisp, technical geometry over calligraphic modulation.
Best suited for large display settings such as headlines, posters, title cards, and logo wordmarks where the outline construction can stay crisp. It also fits UI-themed graphics, sci-fi or gaming-related branding, and packaging accents that call for a technical, geometric voice rather than continuous text readability.
The tone feels futuristic and engineered, with a retro arcade/space-age flavor driven by the bevelled corners and multi-line outline treatment. Its skeletal construction reads as blueprint-like and mechanical, suggesting instrumentation, digital interfaces, and stylized techno branding.
The design appears intended to deliver a distinctive, geometric outline style with engineered corner chamfers and inline detailing, emphasizing a constructed, futuristic personality. Its letterforms prioritize visual motif and silhouette consistency across the set, aiming for strong display impact and a recognizable techno aesthetic.
Because the design relies on thin outlines and internal linework, it benefits from ample size and contrast against the background; small sizes or busy imagery may cause the detailing to visually merge. The angular rounding and consistent corner chamfers give the alphabet a cohesive, hard-surface aesthetic across caps, lowercase, and numerals.