Sans Other Giri 3 is a very bold, wide, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, logos, packaging, sports branding, industrial, poster, rugged, playful, retro, impact, texture, signage, branding, novelty, blocky, faceted, squared, chamfered, condensed counters.
A heavy, block-constructed sans with squared proportions and subtly uneven, faceted outer contours. Strokes end in blunt terminals with occasional chamfer-like cuts and inward notches that create a carved, stencil-adjacent impression without fully breaking forms apart. Counters are compact and often rectangular, and the overall rhythm is dense, with sturdy verticals and simplified curves that read as flattened arcs rather than true rounds. The lowercase follows the same chunky geometry, keeping bowls and shoulders tight and boxy, while numerals mirror the caps’ solid, poster-ready silhouettes.
Best suited to display applications such as posters, headlines, logo wordmarks, and bold packaging panels where its faceted details can be appreciated. It can also work for sports or event branding, badges, and high-impact UI headers, but is less ideal for long passages at small sizes due to dense counters.
The font conveys an assertive, industrial tone with a touch of quirky ruggedness, like cut-out signage or sports/utility branding. Its chunky shapes and angular interruptions add energy and a slightly mischievous, comic-poster feel, balancing toughness with approachability.
The design appears intended to provide a robust, attention-grabbing sans that feels cut, stamped, or carved, adding character through angular notches and flattened curves while staying broadly sans in structure. It prioritizes impact and texture over neutrality, aiming for immediate recognition in display contexts.
Because of the tight counters and heavy internal space economy, clarity improves at larger sizes where the notches and facets read as intentional detailing rather than noise. The design’s distinctive “carved” edges become a key texture in headlines and short bursts of text.