Sans Other Ryraf 11 is a regular weight, narrow, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, ui labels, tech branding, packaging, techno, industrial, retro, utilitarian, digital, compactness, precision, futurism, utility, systematic look, monoline, angular, square, condensed, geometric.
A condensed, monoline sans with squared geometry and a distinctly rectilinear construction. Strokes stay fairly even, with sharp corners, flat terminals, and occasional chamfered or notched joints that give counters a boxy, engineered feel. Curves are largely suppressed into rounded-rectangle forms, producing tall, narrow capitals and compact lowercase with simple, structural joins. Overall spacing feels orderly and grid-aware, keeping a consistent rhythm in words while maintaining crisp, high-contrast edges against the page.
It works best for display settings where a compact, technical look is desired—headlines, interface labels, product titling, and bold typographic layouts. The narrow proportions help fit more characters per line, making it useful for space-constrained labeling and graphic applications that benefit from a disciplined, grid-like rhythm.
The font projects a technical, industrial tone with a retro digital flavor—like instrument labeling, arcade-era interfaces, or utilitarian signage. Its strict geometry and narrow stance convey efficiency and precision rather than warmth, leaning into a coded, mechanical personality.
The design appears intended to deliver a clean sans voice with an intentionally constructed, digital-leaning geometry. By reducing curves into squared forms and keeping strokes uniform, it aims for a precise, modern-industrial impression suitable for technical and futuristic themes.
Several glyphs incorporate distinctive angular cut-ins and squared bowls that emphasize a constructed, modular aesthetic. Numerals follow the same tall, compact logic, supporting a cohesive alphanumeric texture in running text and headlines.