Solid Ogvi 11 is a very bold, narrow, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, logotypes, packaging, stickers, playful, goopy, cartoon, cheeky, bouncy, attention grab, humor, graphic texture, cartoon branding, novel display, bulbous, blobby, soft-edged, amorphous, chunky.
A heavy, blob-like display face with tightly packed, rounded letterforms and irregular contours. Strokes appear as soft, swollen masses with little internal differentiation, and many counters are collapsed into solid shapes, creating dense silhouettes. The italic slant and uneven, organic edges produce a wobbly rhythm, while proportions vary noticeably from glyph to glyph, giving the set a hand-shaped, elastic feel. In text, letters tend to merge visually into a continuous dark band, with minimal white space between forms.
Best suited to short display applications where impact matters more than precision—posters, punchy headlines, playful brand marks, packaging, and merch-style graphics. It can work well for kid-friendly, comedic, or slime-themed visuals, and for situations where you want type to behave like a graphic shape rather than a text texture.
The overall tone is humorous and mischievous, like spilled ink, melting rubber, or puffy paint. Its bouncy, imperfect outlines lean into a cartoon sensibility and feel intentionally unruly rather than refined. The dense, inky texture gives it a bold, attention-grabbing presence with a playful edge.
This design appears intended to transform the alphabet into bold, gummy silhouettes with a lively slant and irregular, handmade energy. By minimizing interior openings and emphasizing soft, swollen forms, it prioritizes novelty and visual punch over conventional legibility, inviting use as a graphic, characterful display voice.
Because counters are largely closed and sidebearings feel tight, readability drops quickly as lines and words become solid, undulating shapes. The strongest character comes through in short bursts where the silhouettes can be recognized rather than in extended reading settings.