Outline Ryhe 2 is a very light, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, packaging, signage, clean, technical, playful, retro, outline display, graphic impact, clean geometry, sign-like clarity, monoline, rounded, geometric, crisp, airy.
A monoline outline sans with softly squared curves and consistently even contour weight. The construction is clean and geometric, with rounded terminals and generous interior counters that keep the hollow shapes open at display sizes. Uppercase forms lean toward broad, stable proportions with simple joins, while the lowercase maintains a straightforward, readable rhythm and a single‑storey “a.” Numerals are similarly simple and open, matching the overall rounded-rectangle geometry.
Best suited to display settings such as headlines, posters, branding marks, and packaging where the outline effect can be a primary graphic element. It can work well for signage-style typography and UI hero text when used large enough to keep the contours distinct. For long passages, the hollow construction may feel too light and visually busy compared to solid text faces.
The outlined construction gives the face an airy, light-on-its-feet presence that reads as modern and graphic rather than texty. Its smooth geometry and gentle corner rounding add a friendly, slightly playful tone, while the crisp, schematic contours can also feel technical and sign-like. Overall it projects a retro-futurist display energy without becoming decorative or chaotic.
The font appears designed to deliver a clean outline look with friendly geometry, prioritizing consistency of contour and open counters for high-impact display typography. Its forms aim to balance straightforward sans-serif structure with a distinctive hollow presence that can be layered, colored, or paired with fills in graphic compositions.
Because the design is contour-only, perceived weight depends heavily on background contrast and size; it will look most confident when set larger or with ample spacing. The outlines remain consistent across letters and figures, which helps it hold together in short headlines and punchy phrases.