Hollow Other Pedi 4 is a bold, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, packaging, party invites, kids branding, playful, retro, marquee, toy-like, festive, attention-grabbing, decorative texture, signage feel, novelty display, rounded, dotted, bubble-like, stencil-like, monoline.
A rounded, monoline display face built from thick black strokes that are “punched” with evenly spaced circular holes, creating a hollowed, dotted interior along both curves and straights. Terminals are fully rounded, corners are softened, and counters are generous, giving the alphabet a friendly, bubble-like silhouette. The dot cutouts follow the stroke path with consistent spacing, producing a steady rhythm and a distinctive texture at both large and medium sizes. Overall proportions feel balanced with a moderate x-height, open apertures, and slightly varied letter widths typical of a non-geometric display design.
Best suited for short display settings where the perforated texture can be appreciated—headlines, posters, playful packaging, party/event invitations, and youth-oriented branding. It can also work for signage-style graphics and badges, but is less appropriate for long-form text where the dotted cutouts may compete with readability at small sizes.
The perforated strokes evoke marquee bulbs, craft punches, and novelty signage, giving the font a cheerful, nostalgic tone. It reads as lighthearted and attention-seeking rather than formal, with a playful “outlined-by-holes” texture that suggests celebration and entertainment.
The design appears intended to provide a bold, friendly display voice with a distinctive perforated, hollowed texture—combining rounded letterforms with an eye-catching cutout pattern to mimic marquee or craft-inspired styling.
The interior perforations are the defining feature and can visually soften joins and intersections, especially where strokes overlap or narrow; the texture becomes denser in smaller details like the diagonals and curved joints. Numerals and capitals maintain the same rounded construction and hole rhythm, keeping the set visually cohesive in mixed-case settings.