Outline Pohi 1 is a light, very wide, medium contrast, reverse italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, stickers, album art, youth branding, graffiti, playful, street, cartoon, hand-drawn, expressiveness, informality, impact, handmade, street style, loopy, bubbly, wiry, wobbly, casual.
A loose, hand-drawn outline face with single-line outer contours and an intentionally uneven stroke path. Forms are very extended horizontally, with swollen, rounded counters and frequent pointy terminals that create a lively, wobbly silhouette. Curves dominate, corners are softened, and the baseline/shoulder behavior feels elastic rather than rigid, giving the alphabet a rolling rhythm. Letter widths vary noticeably, and interior openings tend to be generous, emphasizing the airy outline construction.
Best suited to posters, headlines, packaging accents, sticker-style graphics, and album/merch artwork where the outline look can read clearly and add personality. It can also work for short bursts of copy in playful branding, but is most effective when given ample size and spacing so the lively contours don’t crowd together.
The font conveys a casual, streetwise energy with a doodled, graffiti-adjacent attitude. Its loopy contours and irregular rhythm feel spontaneous and humorous, leaning more toward expressive display than polished neutrality. Overall it reads as friendly and attention-seeking, with a slightly edgy, sketched character.
The design appears intended to mimic quick marker or pen outlines with a stretched, graffiti-like stance, prioritizing character and motion over precision. The hollow outline construction suggests use as a graphic layer that can sit over imagery or be filled/colored in layout, while the exaggerated width and elastic curves aim to maximize impact in display settings.
In the sample text, the outline-only construction and restless contours create strong texture at larger sizes, while smaller sizes may feel busy due to the jittery perimeter and frequent tight turns. Repeated letters show consistent stylistic rules—rounded bowls, stretched horizontals, and tapered, flicked ends—yet retain a deliberately imperfect hand feel that keeps lines of text animated.