Outline Gule 2 is a very light, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logotypes, posters, signage, packaging, playful, retro, techy, friendly, airy, outline display, retro-tech feel, soft geometry, signage clarity, brand distinctiveness, rounded, monoline, tubular, geometric, open counters.
This is a rounded, monoline outline design with softly squared corners and consistent stroke spacing around each glyph. Forms lean geometric and slightly “tubular,” with generous radii, simplified joins, and open interior shapes that keep counters clear despite the outline construction. Curves and straight segments are balanced for a smooth rhythm, and letters like S, G, and the numerals show carefully controlled cornering rather than sharp terminals. Overall proportions feel steady and readable, with a clean baseline and a cohesive, engineered contour throughout the set.
Best suited for display use such as headlines, branding, posters, and signage where the outline effect can remain crisp. It can also work well for packaging or event graphics that want a clean, playful, retro-tech feel, especially when paired with solid fills, color layers, or bold backgrounds.
The font projects a light, upbeat personality with a retro-futuristic flavor—part arcade signage, part modern UI line iconography. Its rounded outlines soften the geometry, creating a friendly tone while still feeling technical and structured. The airy, hollow look gives it a spacious, modern presence suited to display-led compositions.
The design intention appears to be a streamlined outline display face that emphasizes rounded geometry and consistent contouring for a modern, approachable look. The simplified construction and even rhythm suggest it’s meant to deliver recognizable letterforms with a distinctive hollow aesthetic rather than dense text setting.
Because the design relies on thin outlines, it benefits from adequate size and contrast against the background to preserve continuity of the contours. The rounded construction reads especially well in short headlines, where the distinctive hollow shapes and softened corners become a defining stylistic cue.