Sans Other Syha 7 is a very light, wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: display, headlines, posters, ui labels, tech branding, techno, futuristic, digital, architectural, modular, futurism, systematic, interface, sci-fi, branding, square, angular, rectilinear, chamfered, geometric.
A rectilinear, geometric sans built from straight strokes and crisp right angles, with frequent open corners and occasional chamfered cuts. Curves are largely replaced by squared forms, giving bowls and counters a boxy, engineered feel; several glyphs use breaks at joins that emphasize a constructed, segmented rhythm. Stroke weight is consistent and lean, with generous internal space and a slightly expanded, horizontal stance in many characters. The lowercase keeps a clean, simplified structure (single-story forms where applicable), and the overall texture reads orderly and grid-aligned in text.
Best suited for display sizes where the angular construction and corner breaks remain clear: titles, posters, logotypes, sci-fi or tech branding, and interface labeling. It can work for short text in controlled settings, but the segmented joins and squared counters are most effective when given space and adequate size.
The design conveys a futuristic, techno tone—precise, schematic, and slightly game-interface in its modular construction. Its squared contours and intentional gaps suggest a digital display sensibility while remaining recognizably typographic.
The font appears intended to translate a grid-based, engineered aesthetic into a readable sans, prioritizing modular geometry and a digital, constructed personality over conventional roundness. Its consistent stroke logic and squared forms aim to create a cohesive futuristic voice across letters and numerals.
Distinctive details include squared bowls (e.g., in B/D/O-like forms), a sharply angled V/W vocabulary, and occasional disconnected terminals that create a mechanical, plotted look. The lining numerals match the same boxy geometry, reinforcing a consistent, system-like character across alphanumerics.