Solid Mohe 7 is a very bold, wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, packaging, stickers, kids media, playful, chunky, friendly, retro, cartoon, attention, humor, approachability, impact, nostalgia, rounded, blobby, soft, squarish, stubby.
A heavy, rounded display face with soft corners and swollen, blob-like strokes that create a compact, cushioned silhouette. Counters are minimized and often partially closed, giving many letters a solid, cutout feel with small notches and pinched apertures defining key forms. The rhythm is bouncy and irregular in detail while remaining consistent in overall stroke mass, with short terminals, broad shoulders, and simplified joins that read as molded shapes rather than drawn pen strokes.
Best suited to short display settings where its solid, rounded shapes can read clearly: headlines, posters, packaging, labels, stickers, and playful branding. It can also work for event titles and social graphics where a fun, high-impact voice is needed, but it is less appropriate for long text or small UI sizes due to its collapsed interiors and dense forms.
The font projects a humorous, kid-friendly tone with a throwback, cartoon-signage character. Its softened geometry and near-solid interiors feel cozy and mischievous, trading precision for personality. The overall impression is bold and attention-seeking, suited to lighthearted, informal messaging.
Likely designed to deliver maximum visual impact with a soft, approachable personality, using near-solid letterforms and rounded corners to feel tactile and friendly. The simplified construction and intentionally quirky apertures suggest an emphasis on bold presence and character over conventional text readability.
Legibility relies on distinctive exterior silhouettes and small carved openings, so spacing and size matter—at smaller settings, the partially closed counters can make letters feel more alike. The numerals match the same inflated, simplified construction and maintain the same strong, poster-like presence as the letters.