Inline Irvo 7 is a very bold, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, logos, packaging, game ui, retro, arcade, industrial, playful, bold, impact, decoration, branding, retro styling, signage, outlined, ink-trap, chiseled, angular, stencil-like.
A heavy, blocky display face built from straight segments and sharp corners, with frequent diagonal cuts that create a chiseled, faceted silhouette. Each glyph is filled solid but opened up by a narrow internal inline that traces a simplified inner contour, producing a crisp, sign-painter-like channel through the forms. Counters tend toward squared geometry, terminals are flat, and several joins show small notches and stepped transitions that add a machined, constructed feel. Spacing and widths vary by letter, with capitals that read as compact and forceful while the lowercase keeps the same rigid, modular logic.
Well-suited for bold headlines, posters, and logo wordmarks where a decorative inline can carry the visual identity. It also fits packaging, badges, and game or entertainment graphics that benefit from a retro, high-impact look. For long text or small sizes, the narrow inline and dense black shapes may require generous sizing and spacing to maintain clarity.
The overall tone is energetic and graphic, mixing retro arcade poster punch with an industrial, cut-metal attitude. The inline detailing adds a decorative flair that feels vintage and attention-grabbing rather than neutral, giving headlines a lively, branded character.
Designed to deliver maximum visual punch with a built-in decorative inline, combining sturdy block construction with carved-in detail for instant, theme-forward branding. The faceted corners and notched joins suggest an intention to evoke machined signage, arcade-era graphics, and bold display typography that stands out at a glance.
The inner inline is consistently narrow and high-contrast against the black fill, making the design read best at display sizes where the interior channel stays open. Angular diagonals and squared counters produce a strong rhythm in all-caps settings, while the stepped details lend a slightly hand-cut, stencil-adjacent personality.