Outline Lyzu 8 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, reverse italic, tall x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logotypes, signage, titling, futuristic, techy, neon, dynamic, retro, neon effect, tech display, retro futurism, motion, monoline, inline, rounded corners, oblique, geometric.
A monoline outline face built from double-line contours with a narrow internal channel, giving each letter a hollow, inline look. Strokes maintain consistent thickness with low contrast and largely geometric construction—straight verticals, squared curves, and softly rounded corners. The overall stance is oblique with a right-leaning, reverse-italic feel, and proportions skew tall and slightly condensed; counters are rounded-rectangular and terminals stay blunt and clean. Spacing appears even and legible for an outline design, with simplified joins that keep the letterforms crisp at display sizes.
Best suited to display typography such as headlines, posters, event graphics, packaging accents, and brand marks where the hollow inline effect can stay prominent. It also works well for UI hero text, tech-themed visuals, and signage-style compositions, especially when used at larger sizes or with high-contrast color treatments.
The double-stroke outline and slanted posture create a lively, sci‑fi and signage-like tone, reminiscent of neon tubing and retro-futurist industrial graphics. It reads energetic and technical rather than formal, with a playful edge that suits bold, stylized messaging.
The font appears designed to deliver a distinctive outline silhouette with an inline, tube-like rhythm, combining geometric clarity with a forward-leaning stance to suggest speed and modernity. Its consistent monoline construction prioritizes a clean, reproducible look for graphic applications where the contour itself is the main stylistic feature.
The design keeps interior openings generous for an outline, helping characters like O, Q, and 0 remain distinct. Diagonal-heavy forms (K, V, W, X, Y) emphasize motion, while the rounded-rectangle vocabulary stays consistent across caps, lowercase, and numerals.