Hollow Other Abba 8 is a very bold, wide, very high contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Linotte' by JCFonts, 'Corkboard JNL' by Jeff Levine, 'Mohr Rounded' by Latinotype, and 'Hupaisa' by Melvastype (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: logos, packaging, posters, headlines, kids branding, playful, bubbly, cartoon, friendly, retro, playful display, decorative texture, gloss effect, brand impact, rounded, chunky, soft, bulbous, inline highlights.
A heavily rounded, chunky display face with inflated, blob-like letterforms and soft terminals throughout. Strokes are broadly uniform in mass but include small irregular internal knockouts and highlight-like cutouts that create a hollowed, shiny effect rather than true outlines. Counters are compact and circular, curves dominate over straight segments, and joins are smoothed to keep the texture bouncy and cohesive. Spacing reads on the open side for a display style, helping the dense forms stay legible at larger sizes.
Best suited to logos, packaging, posters, and bold headline settings where its rounded mass and hollowed highlights can read clearly. It also fits playful branding, event graphics, stickers/merch, and short UI or social titles, but is less appropriate for long-form text due to its heavy presence.
The overall tone is cheerful and approachable, with a cartoonish, confectionery feel. The hollowed highlights add a playful sense of gloss and motion, giving the alphabet a lively, toy-like personality that leans fun rather than formal.
The design appears intended as a characterful display font that stays highly readable while projecting a fun, glossy, bubble-like aesthetic. The internal cutouts function as decorative knockouts to add depth and signature texture without breaking the overall rounded silhouette.
Distinctive details include the consistent use of small interior cut-ins that behave like specular highlights, plus simplified, rounded construction in diagonals (notably in V/W/X/Y) to maintain the soft silhouette. Numerals match the same inflated geometry, keeping the set visually unified for headings and short callouts.