Inline Heme 3 is a very light, normal width, low contrast, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: display, headlines, branding, posters, ui titles, futuristic, technical, neon, architectural, retro sci‑fi, sci‑fi styling, technical voice, wireframe effect, geometric consistency, display impact, monoline, geometric, octagonal corners, rounded chamfers, open counters.
A monoline, geometric sans built from thin strokes with a consistent inline channel that creates a hollowed, double-stroke effect. Letterforms are predominantly rectilinear with chamfered, octagonal corners and squared curves, producing crisp, engineered outlines. Proportions lean narrow and vertically oriented, with a tall x-height and compact apertures; bowls and counters are kept open and angular. Spacing reads even in text, while distinctive construction details (like segmented joins and straight-sided curves) give the rhythm a precise, modular feel.
Best suited to display settings where its fine inline detailing can be appreciated: headlines, logos, posters, packaging accents, and tech or sci‑fi themed graphics. It can work for short UI titles or interface labeling at comfortable sizes, but the delicate, multi-line construction benefits from moderate-to-large point sizes and good contrast against the background.
The inline, outline-like construction and chamfered geometry evoke a futuristic, instrument-panel aesthetic—clean, technical, and slightly retro in a sci‑fi way. The overall tone feels sleek and synthetic, like illuminated signage or vector UI lettering.
The design appears intended to translate a precise, constructed geometry into a light, wireframe-like display voice. By combining chamfered corners with a consistent inline channel, it aims to feel engineered and modern while retaining a distinctive neon/outline personality.
Diagonal-heavy letters (e.g., V/W/X/Y) emphasize the wireframe quality, while rounded forms (O/Q/0) resolve into faceted, corner-cut shapes rather than true curves. The digit set follows the same angular logic, with clear differentiation and consistent inline detailing that keeps the style cohesive across alphanumerics.