Sans Other Tezo 7 is a very light, normal width, monoline, reverse italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, packaging, album art, techy, quirky, futuristic, edgy, angular, futurism, experimentation, tech aesthetic, display impact, wireframe, outlined, geometric, faceted, tilted.
A very thin, monoline, outlined construction built from straight segments and sharp corners, with almost no curves. Many forms feel faceted and slightly irregular, producing a hand-drawn, wireframe-like geometry. The overall stance is noticeably slanted in a reverse-italic direction, with narrow counters and open, angular joins. Terminals are blunt and squared, and the rhythm alternates between compact shapes and longer, jointed strokes, giving the set a purposefully schematic look.
Best suited to display settings where its outlined geometry can be appreciated—headlines, posters, experimental branding, packaging, and entertainment or tech-themed graphics. It can work for short UI labels or titles when set at larger sizes, but its ultra-thin strokes and angular details are likely to lose clarity in small text.
The typeface projects a futuristic, technical tone with a playful, offbeat edge. Its angled posture and polygonal shapes suggest sci‑fi interfaces, experimental design, and DIY digital aesthetics rather than classic neutrality.
The design appears intended to reinterpret a sans foundation through a constructed, polygonal, outline system with a reversed slant. It prioritizes a distinctive, stylized texture and a sci‑fi/technical voice over conventional text readability.
Uppercase and lowercase share the same angular logic, with distinctive single-storey lowercase forms and simplified bowls. Numerals follow the same outlined, straight-stroke approach, reading like constructed signage rather than traditional text figures. The consistent stroke weight keeps the texture airy, while the slant and sharp corners add visual tension.