Outline Urli 6 is a light, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, packaging, branding, invitations, elegant, vintage, airy, decorative, refined, engraved look, decorative display, vintage flavor, refined branding, inline, hairline, serif, bracketed, high-waisted.
A delicate inline serif with hairline, hollowed letterforms: a thin outer contour paired with an interior inline that creates a double-stroke, engraved effect. The proportions are tall and slightly condensed in feel, with crisp verticals, bracketed serifs, and gently rounded joins. Curves are clean and controlled, while terminals occasionally finish with small ball-like details (notably on some lowercase and numerals), adding a subtle ornamental rhythm. Overall spacing reads even and text remains coherent at display sizes, with the outline structure producing a light, airy texture on the page.
Best suited to display typography such as headlines, posters, and identity work where the inline outline can be appreciated. It works well on packaging, menus, invitations, and label-style designs that benefit from a classic, engraved tone. For long-form text, it will generally perform better in larger sizes and with generous line spacing.
The font conveys a refined, old-world elegance reminiscent of engraved signage and classic editorial titling. Its hollow, inline construction feels decorative and upscale rather than utilitarian, lending a sense of sophistication and quiet theatricality.
The design appears intended to reinterpret traditional serif letterforms through an inline outline construction, creating a lightweight, decorative face that evokes engraving and vintage print aesthetics while staying orderly enough for set text at display sizes.
The inline/outline construction creates strong internal counters and negative space, which helps maintain legibility in larger settings but will thin out quickly at small sizes or on low-resolution outputs. Numerals and a few lowercase forms introduce slightly more flourish, giving mixed-case typography a lively, boutique character.