Outline Liby 5 is a regular weight, narrow, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: team branding, posters, headlines, jerseys, signage, sporty, collegiate, bold, playful, retro, athletic branding, retro display, graphic layering, headline impact, octagonal, chamfered, blocky, monoline, outlined.
A condensed, block-based outline design with uniform stroke thickness and generous interior counters. Letterforms are built from straight segments with chamfered corners, creating an octagonal, “cut” silhouette reminiscent of jersey lettering. The outlines are clean and consistent, with mostly squared terminals, simple geometry, and compact widths; curves (like C, O, S) are rendered with faceted corners rather than smooth arcs. Lowercase follows the same architectural logic with sturdy stems and simplified bowls, maintaining a coherent, sign-like rhythm across letters and figures.
Best suited for display typography where a bold, athletic outline look is desired: team identities, jersey numbers and names, tournament posters, and high-contrast signage. It can also work for retro-styled UI accents, badges, and packaging callouts where the outlined construction adds emphasis without filling the letterforms.
The overall tone reads sporty and collegiate, with a confident, scoreboard-like energy. Its faceted outlines give it a retro, arcade-and-athletics feel—assertive and graphic rather than delicate—while the hollow construction keeps it light and punchy.
The design appears intended to evoke classic varsity/athletic lettering in an outlined form, combining condensed proportions with chamfered geometry for a crisp, modular look. The consistent monoline outline suggests it was drawn to be easily layered, stroked, or paired with solid fills in graphic compositions.
Because the design is purely outlined, the perceived weight depends heavily on size and background contrast; at small sizes the interior space can close up visually. The numerals and capitals share the same angular vocabulary, which helps it hold together well in short, high-impact settings like names, numbers, and headings.