Hollow Other Hahu 4 is a regular weight, very wide, very high contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logotypes, packaging, album covers, retro, techno, edgy, stylized, display, distinctiveness, motion, ornamentation, impact, inline, engraved, slab serif, angular, condensed counters.
A sharply slanted, wide display face with crisp slab-like serifs and strong, calligraphic contrast. The letterforms are built from dark outer strokes that are sliced with consistent internal knockouts, creating an inline/engraved effect that reads as hollowed compartments rather than simple hairline inlines. Curves are tight and slightly squared-off, joins are angular, and terminals often finish in wedge-like points. Overall spacing feels airy for such wide forms, with compact internal counters and prominent cut-ins that create a rhythmic, mechanical pattern across words.
Best suited to large-scale display settings such as posters, headlines, titles, and punchy branding where the hollowed detailing can be appreciated. It can work well for logotypes, packaging accents, and entertainment or nightlife themes, but is likely to lose clarity in long passages or small UI text.
The cutout construction and italic forward lean give it a kinetic, engineered feel—part retro sign-painting, part sci‑fi title card. It projects speed and attitude, with a slightly aggressive edge from the sharp terminals and high-contrast stroke shifts.
The design appears intended as a distinctive display italic that merges slab-serif structure with an engraved, cutout interior to create motion and visual texture. Its wide stance and bold sectional rhythm prioritize character and impact over neutrality.
Uppercase and lowercase share a consistent slanted skeleton, and the numerals echo the same hollowed, sectional treatment. The internal knockouts can visually dominate at smaller sizes, so the design reads best when the cutouts have room to resolve.