Outline Vaho 2 is a bold, wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, logos, signage, packaging, art deco, retro, neon, playful, display, display impact, retro signage, decorative clarity, geometric styling, geometric, monoline, inline, double-stroke, rounded.
A geometric outline display face built from uniform strokes with an inline, double-contour construction that creates a hollow interior channel. Letterforms are predominantly rounded and circular (notably in C, O, Q, and the numerals), balanced by flat terminals and occasional squared corners. Strokes keep a steady width and spacing throughout, producing a crisp, sign-like rhythm; counters are generally generous, and joins are clean and schematic rather than calligraphic. Overall proportions read broad and open, with simple, legible silhouettes even where the outline treatment adds interior detail.
Best suited for display settings where the outline-and-inline effect can be appreciated, such as posters, headlines, event graphics, logos, and signage-inspired branding. It can also work as an accent type on packaging or social graphics, especially when paired with a simpler text face for body copy.
The inline outline treatment evokes classic marquee and chrome-sign aesthetics, lending a cheerful, retro-futurist tone. Its graphic, high-clarity construction feels lively and attention-seeking, with a hint of 1920s/30s Deco styling translated into a modern, minimal line system.
The font appears designed to deliver a bold graphic presence through a clean, geometric outline system, combining legible silhouettes with decorative inline structure. Its consistent stroke logic suggests an intention for scalable display use where a “lit” or architectural linework feel is desirable.
The design’s visual identity comes from consistent parallel lines and smooth curvature, which read especially strongly in rounded letters and numerals. At smaller sizes the interior channel may visually close up, while at larger sizes the layered outline effect becomes a defining feature.