Outline Tizi 2 is a very light, wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logotypes, signage, packaging, art deco, futuristic, technical, elegant, architectural, deco revival, display impact, neon feel, architectural tone, technical styling, monoline, rounded, geometric, inline, modular.
A monoline outline design built from softly squared, rounded-rectangle forms. Strokes are rendered as single outer contours with generous internal counters, and many letters feature an additional interior “rail”/inline that echoes the outer shape, creating a layered, tubular feel. Curves are smooth and corners are consistently radiused, while terminals tend to be blunt and squared-off; diagonals (notably in K, V, W, X, Y, Z) introduce sharper geometry that contrasts with the predominantly rectilinear construction. The overall rhythm is even and open, with simplified joins and clean, consistent spacing that keeps the airy outlines legible at display sizes.
Best suited to display applications where the outline and inline detailing can be appreciated—headlines, posters, brand marks, event graphics, and signage. It also works well for packaging and title treatments that benefit from a sleek, architectural texture; for extended small text, the fine outlines may require larger sizes or higher contrast backgrounds.
The font conveys a polished retro-modern mood: part Art Deco signage, part schematic/industrial labeling. Its open outlines and repeated internal lines feel architectural and engineered, giving text a refined, futuristic sheen rather than a casual or handwritten character.
The design appears intended to deliver a distinctive, constructed display voice through rounded geometric outlines and repeated interior contours, evoking neon tubing, metal channel lettering, or streamlined Deco-era lettering updated with a technical finish.
The sample text shows the outline construction remains consistent across upper and lower case, with single-storey forms and simplified details that emphasize geometry over calligraphic nuance. Numerals follow the same rounded-rectilinear logic, maintaining a cohesive, modular texture across mixed settings.