Solid Lebi 14 is a very bold, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, logotypes, packaging, stickers, playful, chunky, retro, cartoony, friendly, impact, novelty, playfulness, graphic texture, retro display, rounded, soft-cornered, blobby, compact, stencil-like.
A heavy, chunky display face built from broad, rounded rectangles and softened corners, with a consistently dense silhouette and minimal interior openness. Counters are frequently reduced to small slits or notches, giving many letters a near-solid, cut-out look. Stroke endings are generally squared-off but eased by rounding, and joins stay smooth and bulbous rather than angular. The overall rhythm is compact and blocky, with a slightly irregular, hand-cut feel across curves and diagonals, and robust numerals that match the same filled, low-detail construction.
Best suited for large-size display work such as posters, title treatments, branding marks, packaging, and bold callouts where its solid silhouettes can read as graphic shapes. It also works well for playful, retro, or game/toy-adjacent themes, and for short bursts of text where texture and impact are more important than fine detail.
The tone is playful and bold, reading like a toy-like, retro headline style with a deliberately chunky presence. Its near-solid forms and softened geometry give it a friendly, cartoon-leaning personality that feels more graphic than typographic, emphasizing impact and character over precision.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum visual weight with a distinctive cut-out character, using reduced counters and rounded block geometry to create a memorable, emblem-like presence. It prioritizes punchy shapes and a cohesive, solid texture for attention-grabbing display typography.
Because many counters collapse into small apertures, letter shapes rely strongly on outer silhouettes; this increases punch at large sizes but can reduce distinguishability in tight settings. The lowercase maintains the same blocky DNA as the uppercase, producing a uniform, poster-like texture in paragraphs rather than a traditional text rhythm.