Sans Other Teho 1 is a light, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui labels, headlines, posters, branding, wayfinding, modernist, technical, minimal, geometric, architectural, clarity, modernity, distinctiveness, systematic design, geometric build, monoline, rounded terminals, open counters, wide apertures, taut curves.
A clean monoline sans with simplified, geometric construction and a distinctly drawn, slightly unconventional skeleton. Strokes are even and slender, with rounded terminals and soft joins that keep the texture smooth. Several forms lean on circular and near-rectilinear geometry: the O is a rounded rectangle, curves are taut, and apertures stay open, producing airy counters. Capitals read tall and orderly with generous internal space, while lowercase keeps a compact, functional rhythm with straightforward bowls and minimal modulation.
It should work well for UI labels, dashboards, and product typography where a crisp, modern texture is desirable, as well as for headlines and poster work that benefits from its distinctive geometric quirks. The open counters and simple forms support clear reading at small-to-medium sizes, while the stylized capitals can add character in branding and wayfinding contexts.
The overall tone feels modernist and technical, with an engineered clarity that reads as contemporary and slightly experimental. Its restrained detailing and geometric bias give it a cool, designed-for-interfaces mood rather than a warm, handwritten one.
The design intention appears to be a utilitarian sans built from clear geometric primitives, adding controlled eccentricities to stand apart from standard neo-grotesques. It prioritizes consistent monoline construction, open shapes, and a contemporary, engineered feel suited to modern digital and graphic applications.
The design includes intentional idiosyncrasies—such as the squared/rounded-rect O, a sharp, angular W, and simplified diagonal constructions—that add a subtle sci‑fi/industrial flavor without becoming decorative. Spacing appears even and the forms maintain consistent stroke behavior across letters and figures, helping the font hold together in longer text lines.