Hollow Other Onro 6 is a bold, very wide, low contrast, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, packaging, titles, techy, industrial, playful, retro, modular, textured display, modular construction, tech aesthetic, decorative knockout, geometric, monoline, stencil-like, perforated, grid-based.
A chunky, geometric display face built from squared, modular strokes with open counters and a clearly monoline construction. The outlines are intentionally hollowed with evenly spaced rectangular perforations running along stems, bowls, and crossbars, creating a punched/laddered interior rhythm. Corners are predominantly right-angled, curves are largely squared off, and many glyphs read as assembled from blocky segments, giving a pixel-grid sensibility. Spacing and widths vary by letter, but the overall texture remains consistent through repeated cutout patterns and heavy outer contours.
Best suited for display settings such as headlines, poster typography, title cards, and logo wordmarks where its perforated texture can be appreciated. It can also work well for packaging, event graphics, and tech-leaning or arcade-inspired branding, especially when used in short phrases rather than dense paragraphs.
The repeating perforations and boxy geometry give the font a techy, engineered feel with a playful, game-like edge. It reads as retro-digital and industrial at once—like signage built from modular parts—while the hollow construction keeps large sizes lively and patterned rather than purely solid.
The design appears intended to combine a sturdy, modular skeleton with decorative internal cutouts, turning each stroke into a patterned frame. The consistent perforation motif suggests a deliberate focus on creating a distinctive texture and a constructed, mechanical personality for high-impact display typography.
The internal knockout pattern becomes a strong secondary texture in words, producing a dotted-stripe rhythm that can visually dominate at small sizes. Counters and apertures are generally generous, but the perforations add complexity, making the face most effective when set with ample size and breathing room.