Hollow Other Tiba 4 is a very bold, normal width, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, event promos, kids branding, playful, spooky, cartoon, whimsical, retro, attention grab, textured display, quirky branding, seasonal flavor, blobby, rounded, puffy, chunky, organic.
A very heavy, rounded display face built from soft, blobby strokes with bulb-like terminals and gently irregular contours. The forms are largely monoline in feel but gain visual texture from numerous small internal knockouts and pitted cutouts that read like holes or speckling inside the black shapes. Counters are generous and circular, curves dominate, and joins are smoothed rather than sharp, giving letters a buoyant, inflated silhouette. Spacing appears comfortable for a display style, and the glyph set maintains a consistent “pocked” surface treatment across caps, lowercase, and numerals.
Best suited to posters, headlines, titles, and packaging where large sizes can showcase the internal cutouts and chunky silhouettes. It works well for playful branding, party and event promotions, seasonal or Halloween-themed graphics, and kid-oriented materials, but is less appropriate for long-form reading or small UI text where the interior detailing may fill in.
The overall tone is mischievous and offbeat, mixing kid-friendly cartoon warmth with a slightly eerie, gooey texture. The dotted cutouts add a distressed, creature-like or “bubbly ink” personality that can feel Halloween-adjacent without becoming overtly horror-specific. It reads as fun, quirky, and attention-seeking.
The design appears intended as a characterful display font that prioritizes personality and texture over neutrality. Its inflated shapes and irregular interior knockouts suggest a goal of creating a tactile, bubbly, slightly spooky visual voice that stands out instantly in short text.
Uppercase and lowercase share a cohesive, rounded construction, with single-storey a and g and a soft, bulbous rhythm that stays legible at large sizes. Numerals follow the same inflated styling and internal pitting, helping headlines and short bursts of copy feel unified.