Outline Ipbi 13 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: logos, headlines, posters, packaging, signage, retro, sporty, playful, breezy, techy, display impact, retro flavor, motion, graphic layering, outlined, monoline, rounded, slanted, inline.
A slanted outline sans with rounded corners and monoline contours, built from clean, even strokes that read like a single continuous tube. Letterforms are slightly expanded and open, with generous counters and smooth curves, giving the alphabet an airy footprint despite being contour-only. Several glyphs incorporate an internal inline detail that tracks the outer shape, reinforcing a layered, hollow look. Numerals and capitals keep a steady rhythm and consistent curvature, while joins stay soft and streamlined for a unified, sign-like silhouette.
Best suited to logos, headlines, posters, and packaging where the open outline can act as a graphic element rather than a text face. It also fits signage and apparel-style lettering, especially when paired with bold color fills, strokes, or layered effects. For longer text, it performs more reliably at large sizes where its contours remain crisp and legible.
The overall tone is upbeat and retro-leaning, with a sporty display energy that evokes classic automotive, rink-side, and casual diner graphics. Its slant adds motion and friendliness, while the outline construction keeps it light and playful rather than heavy or formal.
The design appears intended as a display outline italic that delivers motion and personality through slanted geometry, rounded construction, and a consistent contour rhythm. The inline-like detailing and hollow structure suggest it was drawn to layer well with color, strokes, and effects in branding and promotional settings.
The outline construction benefits from ample size; at smaller settings the contour-only strokes and internal inline detail can become visually busy. The rounded terminals and consistent stroke spacing help maintain clarity across a wide range of letter shapes, from compact forms like E and F to wider, more open rounds like O and Q.