Outline Jiha 7 is a light, wide, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, sports branding, packaging, merchandise, sporty, retro, energetic, playful, technical, display impact, dynamic motion, retro styling, graphic clarity, slanted, rounded, monoline, open counters, inline gap.
A slanted, monoline outline design with rounded corners and smooth, continuous contours. The letterforms are built from a consistent outer stroke with an interior inline opening that creates a clean hollow effect, giving shapes a layered, sign-like presence without fill. Proportions skew broad with generous horizontal bowls and clear, open counters; curves (C, G, O, S) read soft and even, while diagonals (K, V, W, X, Y) are crisp and stable. Numerals follow the same construction, with rounded terminals and a uniform outline rhythm that stays consistent across the set.
Well-suited to posters, headlines, and promotional graphics where a bold, energetic outline look is desired. It also fits sports branding, event titles, packaging accents, and merchandise applications that benefit from a dynamic slanted silhouette and a lightweight, hollow presence.
The overall tone feels sporty and upbeat, with a retro display sensibility reminiscent of team graphics, racing stripes, and headline lettering. The hollow construction adds a light, airy confidence, while the slant introduces motion and a forward-leaning energy that reads modern and kinetic.
The design appears intended as a lively display face that delivers motion and impact without heavy fill. Its consistent outline system and rounded geometry suggest a focus on clean reproduction in graphic layouts, emphasizing a sporty, retro-leaning voice for attention-grabbing typography.
Because the design relies on contour and interior spacing, it performs best when the outline thickness and the internal gap remain visually distinct; very small sizes or low-contrast backgrounds may reduce clarity. The rounded joins and simplified shapes keep the texture smooth in longer strings, but the outline treatment still reads as distinctly display-oriented.