Hollow Other Ibzo 3 is a light, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, packaging, logos, games ui, playful, techy, handmade, modular, retro, wireframe look, modular system, display impact, decorative texture, monoline, outlined, rounded, gridded, geometric.
This typeface is built from monoline, rounded-rectangle outlines that trace letterforms on a modular grid. The strokes are hollow, with a consistent outline weight and an internal lattice of short cross-lines that reads like a wireframe or stitched framework. Corners are softly squared, terminals feel capped and pill-like, and the overall geometry is boxy and constructed rather than calligraphic. Uppercase forms are compact and blocky, while lowercase forms retain the same modular construction with simplified bowls and angular joins, creating a deliberately schematic rhythm across text.
Best suited to display settings where its wireframe texture can be appreciated—headlines, posters, album/cover graphics, packaging, and playful branding. It can also work for game/UI labels or tech-themed graphics when used at generous sizes and with ample spacing to keep the interior grid from crowding.
The grid-and-outline construction gives the font a playful, crafty voice with a distinctly techy, diagrammatic feel. It suggests DIY making, wire sculpture, or pixel-adjacent modular design—quirky and friendly rather than severe—while still reading as structured and systematic.
The design appears intended to reinterpret a basic sans skeleton as a modular, hollow framework, emphasizing construction and pattern over pure legibility. The consistent grid logic and outlined treatment prioritize distinctive texture and a crafted, engineered look for expressive typography.
The interior lattice adds texture and visual noise that becomes more apparent at larger sizes, where the “framework” effect is part of the character. Because the forms are assembled from repeated modules, curves are implied through stepped geometry, and counters tend to read as squared or rounded-rectangular openings.