Outline Mypi 5 is a very light, wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, branding, ui display, futuristic, technical, clean, sleek, airline, sci-fi styling, tech ui, modern signage, retro futurism, rounded, monoline, geometric, inline, open forms.
A rounded, geometric outline design built from uniform, monoline contours with generously radiused corners and smooth curves. The letterforms lean on open, segmented construction—many bowls and joins stop short, creating “C”-like apertures and a continuous-line feel rather than fully closed counters. Curves are squarish-round (superellipse-like), with consistent stroke spacing between the outer and inner outlines that reads as an inline track. Proportions are generally expanded, with broad caps and roomy lowercase; spacing appears even and airy, emphasizing clarity over density.
Best suited to display applications such as headlines, posters, logotypes, product branding, and interface or wayfinding-style titling where the open outline can breathe. It works especially well over solid, high-contrast backgrounds and in large-scale settings where its segmented construction and rounded geometry remain crisp.
The overall tone is futuristic and instrument-like, evoking interface typography, transit signage, and retro space-age graphics. Its light, open construction feels polished and engineered, with a calm, modern cadence rather than expressive or handwritten energy.
The design appears intended to deliver a streamlined, contemporary outline aesthetic with a strong geometric backbone and a distinctly technical flavor. By using open counters and consistent monoline contours, it aims for a lightweight, airy presence that feels modern and engineered.
The segmented joins and frequent open counters make the forms distinctive at display sizes, while the outline-only construction reduces presence at small sizes or on complex backgrounds. Numerals share the same rounded, track-like geometry; the zero is a rounded rectangle with a diagonal slash, reinforcing a technical, system-oriented voice.