Sans Other Uhhi 7 is a very light, normal width, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, game ui, album art, futuristic, technical, quirky, hand-drawn, experimental, sci-fi display, schematic styling, geometric system, expressive minimalism, quirky texture, angular, wireframe, monoline, skeletal, geometric.
A wiry, monoline sans with an oblique slant and a deliberately constructed, wireframe feel. Many glyphs are built from straight strokes and slightly bowed segments, often forming open or box-like counters with small gaps that keep the forms airy. Terminals are crisp and unadorned, and joins can appear slightly irregular, giving the geometry a hand-rendered tension rather than pure mechanical precision. Proportions vary across characters, with narrow, spiky diagonals (notably in V/W/X/Y) contrasting with more squared, enclosure-driven letters and numerals.
Best suited for short display settings—headlines, posters, packaging accents, and brand marks—where its angular, schematic construction can be read as a distinctive style cue. It can also work for game/UI titling or tech-themed graphics, but will generally benefit from generous size and spacing to preserve legibility in continuous text.
The tone reads futuristic and technical, like a schematic or interface lettering, but with an offbeat, sketchy personality. Its sharp angles and open constructions give it a coded, sci‑fi flavor, while the subtle irregularity keeps it approachable and idiosyncratic rather than cold.
The letterforms suggest an intention to reinterpret a plain sans skeleton through geometric, boxy constructions and open counters, prioritizing a futuristic, coded aesthetic over conventional readability. The slight hand-drawn wobble appears purposeful, adding character and motion to an otherwise technical structure.
The design leans heavily on rectangular motifs in rounded-rectangle “frames,” especially in bowls and counters, which creates a consistent system across caps, lowercase, and figures. Spacing and rhythm feel intentionally uneven in a way that enhances the experimental voice, making it most convincing at display sizes where the open joints and stroke quirks remain clear.