Outline Jiru 7 is a very light, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, game titles, halloween, playful, hand-drawn, cartoon, spooky, diy, expressive display, handmade texture, whimsical edge, poster impact, irregular, angular, wobbly, outlined, chiseled.
A hand-drawn outline display face with irregular, wobbly contours and a lively, uneven rhythm. Letterforms are built from chunky, angular silhouettes with sharp notches, tapered corners, and occasional wedge-like terminals, while counters are mostly open and rounded inside the jagged outer shapes. Stroke edges vary subtly as if sketched with a marker, and the width and sidebearings fluctuate from glyph to glyph, producing an intentionally unrefined, comic sign-painting feel. Numerals follow the same rough, cut-out geometry and maintain clear, high-contrast interior space despite the outlined construction.
Best suited to headlines, posters, event promos, and packaging where a playful, hand-drawn outline can carry the composition. It also fits game titles, comic-style graphics, and seasonal themes (especially spooky or whimsical campaigns) where texture and character are more important than dense readability.
The overall tone is mischievous and animated, with a slightly eerie, monster-comic energy that reads as fun rather than threatening. Its imperfect outlines and bouncy proportions evoke handmade posters, kid-friendly horror, and whimsical fantasy titling.
This design appears intended as an expressive outline display font that mimics quick marker sketching and cut-paper angles, prioritizing personality and motion over typographic uniformity. The goal seems to be a bold, attention-grabbing silhouette with enough internal openness to keep forms recognizable while remaining distinctly handmade.
The outline-only rendering makes the face feel airy and graphic, with strong figure/ground interplay at larger sizes. The irregular contouring and varying internal apertures create texture across a line of text, so tight tracking or small sizes may reduce clarity compared to more regular display outlines.