Outline Pohi 5 is a light, very wide, low contrast, reverse italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, stickers, comics, kids branding, packaging, playful, hand-drawn, cartoonish, bubbly, quirky, whimsy, informality, comic display, handmade feel, friendly impact, rounded, organic, irregular, bouncy, soft.
A loose, hand-sketched outline face built from inflated, rounded letterforms with gently wobbly contours. Strokes are rendered as single outer silhouettes, leaving the counters open; the outline thickness stays fairly even while the perimeter undulates, creating a lively, imperfect edge. Proportions run broad with squat capitals and a generally generous width, while spacing and letter widths vary from glyph to glyph, reinforcing an informal rhythm. Terminals are blunt and soft, and many curves feel slightly asymmetrical, like marker-drawn bubbles traced in one pass.
Best used for short, high-impact display settings such as posters, playful packaging, stickers, comic-style titles, headings, and logotypes where personality matters more than precision. It works especially well when you can give the outlines room to breathe and place them over a clean, solid background for maximum legibility.
The overall tone is friendly and humorous, with a casual, doodled energy that reads like comic lettering or children’s display type. Its airy outline and exaggerated roundness give it a light, buoyant personality suited to upbeat, non-serious messaging.
The design appears intended to mimic a quick hand-drawn bubble outline, prioritizing charm and spontaneity over strict geometric consistency. The wide, rounded silhouettes and wavy contours suggest a goal of creating an approachable, cartoon-forward display voice that remains visually light through its open, hollow construction.
The font’s outline-only construction means it relies on surrounding contrast for clarity, and the intentionally irregular contours become a defining texture at larger sizes. Counters are simple and open, and the bouncy baseline/shape consistency feels deliberately informal rather than mechanically uniform.