Hollow Other Itpa 10 is a regular weight, wide, very high contrast, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, packaging, kids branding, stickers, playful, cartoony, retro, bubbly, sticker-like, visual pop, playful branding, novelty display, outlined impact, rounded, outlined, inline, soft terminals, bold contour.
A rounded, bubble-like display face built from thick exterior contours with a consistent inner inline/knockout that creates a hollow, double-line effect. Strokes are smooth and monoline in feel at the outline level, with soft corners and inflated curves that give each glyph a puffy silhouette. Counters and inner shapes are simplified and sometimes off-center, emphasizing a hand-drawn, graphic rhythm over strict geometric construction. The lowercase maintains a tall presence with compact apertures, and numerals follow the same ballooned, outlined logic for a cohesive set.
Works best for short, prominent copy such as headlines, packaging callouts, product names, posters, and playful brand marks. It also suits children’s content, casual event graphics, and any application where a soft, outlined look needs to pop against flat color fields.
The overall tone is lighthearted and attention-seeking, with a cartoon title-card energy that reads as friendly rather than formal. The hollow/inline construction evokes sticker art, coloring-book lettering, and playful signage, giving it a nostalgic, pop-graphic feel.
The design appears intended to deliver a buoyant, outlined display style that stays highly legible at large sizes while offering a distinctive hollow/inline detail for visual interest. Its rounded construction and graphic simplicity suggest a focus on friendly impact and retro-inspired novelty.
The double-outline structure can visually fill in at small sizes or in busy backgrounds, so it benefits from generous sizing and clean contrast behind the letterforms. The rounded joins and simplified interior shapes prioritize charm and boldness over precision, making it best treated as a decorative voice rather than a text workhorse.