Outline Ipde 1 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, signage, logos, packaging, playful, retro, friendly, bold, graphic, outline display, graphic impact, branding, signlike clarity, monoline, rounded, outlined, open counters, clean.
A rounded, monoline outline design with a consistent double-contour construction that creates a hollow interior throughout. Letterforms are built from simple geometric strokes: softened corners, generous curves, and uniform stroke thickness with minimal modulation. Uppercase shapes lean toward straightforward, signlike geometry (notably the circular bowls and broad arches), while lowercase maintains a similarly simple structure with open counters and compact joins; the single-storey forms and smooth terminals keep the rhythm even. Numerals follow the same rounded outline logic, reading clearly with wide bowls and uncomplicated diagonals.
Best suited to display applications where the outline effect can read crisply—headlines, posters, storefront-style signage, packaging callouts, and logo marks. It can also work for short emphatic lines in UI or social graphics, especially when set large or paired with a solid companion face for body text.
The outlined, hollow treatment gives the face a light-on-its-feet, attention-getting presence that feels upbeat and slightly nostalgic. Its clean geometry and rounded detailing soften the tone, making it feel approachable rather than technical or severe.
The design appears intended to deliver a distinctive hollow outline look with friendly, rounded geometry and consistent construction across caps, lowercase, and figures. It prioritizes graphic impact and clarity in large-scale settings while keeping forms simple and highly repeatable for branding and titling.
Because the design is all contour with no fill, perceived weight depends heavily on background color and reproduction method; it tends to look strongest at larger sizes or with higher-contrast color pairings. The uniform outlines create a steady texture in text, while the open interiors can make tight spacing and small sizes feel airy or delicate.