Sans Other Tevi 9 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, logos, packaging, modernist, techy, futuristic, playful, graphic, distinctiveness, futurism, systematic motif, display impact, slashed forms, geometric, monoline, rounded, high impact.
A geometric, monoline sans with rounded bowls and clean, uniform stroke weight. Many characters feature a consistent horizontal “slice” cut through the midsection, creating a distinctive broken-stroke motif that repeats across rounds (C, O, G, Q) and several lowercase forms. Proportions lean wide with generous counters and open apertures, producing a steady, bold silhouette at display sizes. Terminals are mostly straight and crisp, while curves are smooth and near-circular, giving the design a calibrated, constructed feel.
Best suited to display typography such as headlines, posters, identity systems, and logo wordmarks where the midline cuts can read as a deliberate signature. It can also work for packaging and short UI/tech labels when set large enough to preserve the interior breaks and counters.
The repeated midline cuts lend a futuristic, engineered tone—part sci‑fi interface, part contemporary graphic branding. It feels assertive and attention-grabbing, but also slightly playful due to the rhythmic interruptions in the letterforms. The overall impression is modern and designed to be noticed rather than to disappear into body text.
The design appears intended to take a familiar geometric sans foundation and introduce a systematic disruption—midline slicing—to create instant distinctiveness while maintaining legibility. The consistent application of the motif suggests a branding-oriented typeface built for recognizable texture and contemporary, tech-forward styling.
The sliced motif can reduce continuity on small sizes or in dense settings, but it creates strong recognition and a memorable texture in headlines. Numerals follow the same construction, with the breaks adding visual motion and helping differentiate shapes. The sample text shows the effect clearly: long lines form a patterned horizontal rhythm where the cuts align across words.