Shadow Rada 14 is a very light, wide, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, branding, album art, game ui, sci‑fi, tech, futuristic, glitchy, experimental, distinctive display, tech styling, layered depth, modular system, monoline, stencil-like, cut-out, segmented, rounded corners.
A monoline, geometric sans with rounded terminals and frequent cut-outs that break strokes into short segments. Many letters show an offset, partial duplicate line that reads like a subtle shadow/echo rather than a fully filled outline, creating a layered linear look. Curves are smooth but interrupted by small gaps, while horizontals and verticals are simplified into modular parts, giving the alphabet a constructed, engineered rhythm. Overall spacing and proportions feel open and airy, with a consistent light stroke and a clean, upright stance.
Best suited to display settings where its cut-out geometry and shadow-echo detailing can be appreciated—posters, titles, logos, packaging accents, and tech-oriented branding. It can also work for short UI labels or game/interface graphics when set large with generous tracking, but is less ideal for long passages of body text.
The segmented strokes and offset echo lines give the face a digital, sci‑fi energy—part schematic, part glitch. It feels sleek and modern, with a slightly playful, coded aesthetic that suggests interfaces, futurism, and experimental display work.
The design appears intended to merge a clean geometric sans structure with a hollowed, segmented stroke treatment and a restrained shadow/offset accent. The goal seems to be a distinctive, futuristic voice that remains orderly and systematic while adding motion and depth through breaks and echoed lines.
Legibility depends on size and context: the frequent gaps and shadow-like duplication add texture but can soften clarity in dense text. The numerals and capitals maintain the same modular logic, reinforcing a cohesive, system-like design language.