Outline Ohho 2 is a very light, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logotypes, packaging, signage, modern, airy, technical, minimal, architectural, display impact, modern branding, technical tone, neon outline, graphic texture, geometric, monolinear, double-line, rounded, clean.
A clean, geometric outline sans with monolinear contours and a consistent double-line construction that reads like an inline perimeter around each stroke. Curves are broadly circular with smooth joins, while straights are crisp and evenly spaced, creating a uniform rhythm across capitals, lowercase, and numerals. Counters and apertures are generous, and terminals are blunt and square-ended, giving the letterforms a precise, engineered feel. The overall drawing stays disciplined and even, with tidy alignment and stable proportions that keep the outline effect legible at display sizes.
Best suited to display typography such as headlines, posters, branding marks, packaging accents, and signage where the outline construction can remain crisp and intentional. It also works well for tech-leaning UI moments, labels, and titling when used at larger sizes with adequate spacing.
The font conveys a sleek, contemporary tone—cool, airy, and slightly futuristic. Its hollow, contour-only construction suggests signage, schematics, or neon-like linework, delivering a lightweight presence that feels modern and refined rather than expressive or handwritten.
The design appears intended to deliver a contemporary outline look with strict geometric discipline, offering a lightweight, architectural alternative to filled sans serifs. Its consistent double-line contours aim to provide a distinctive, modern texture while keeping forms familiar and easily readable in display contexts.
Because the design relies on open outlines, contrast is driven by negative space between the parallel contours rather than filled mass, which makes it most effective when given room and sufficient size. The consistent geometry across letters and figures helps maintain clarity in short strings and headings, while the outlined detail can become visually delicate in dense text or small settings.