Outline Nywi 2 is a very light, narrow, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, signage, logos, packaging, technical, retro, industrial, sporty, architectural, display impact, signage feel, technical aesthetic, space saving, outlined, condensed, squared, rounded corners, open counters.
A condensed, all-outline sans with uniform stroke outlining and a predominantly rectilinear skeleton. Corners are slightly softened and many joins are squared off, producing a clean, engineered rhythm rather than calligraphic modulation. Proportions are tall with compact internal spaces; counters are simple and often squared/rounded-rectangle in feel, keeping the texture even across words. Figures and capitals share the same narrow, vertical stance, and the outline construction stays consistent from glyph to glyph.
Best suited to display settings such as headlines, posters, and wayfinding where the outlined construction can read clearly at larger sizes. It also fits logo marks, sports or event branding, and packaging that benefits from a technical, structured look. Use with adequate size and contrast to preserve the thin outline detail.
The overall tone reads as technical and industrial, with a clear retro signage flavor. Its streamlined, skeletal outlines evoke blueprint lettering, athletic titling, and display typography associated with machinery, sports, or sci‑fi interfaces. The crisp geometry and reduced interior mass give it a modern, airy presence despite the vintage styling cues.
The design appears intended as a condensed, geometric outline display face that prioritizes crisp structure and consistent rhythm. Its restrained curves and squared proportions suggest a goal of producing a clean, engineered aesthetic for bold titling and brand-led applications without relying on filled-in stroke mass.
The outline treatment creates strong edge definition while keeping the interior open, which can make the face feel lighter and more spacious at display sizes. The straight-sided forms and squared terminals emphasize structure and alignment, and the condensed widths help set tight, vertical headlines.