Sans Other Tiha 1 is a light, narrow, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui, signage, headlines, posters, branding, techno, futuristic, architectural, instrumental, minimal, tech aesthetic, modular design, display clarity, systematic forms, geometric, square, angular, rectilinear, modular.
A rectilinear, geometric sans with open counters and an almost grid-drawn construction. Strokes are consistently thin and uniform, with corners kept sharp and turns rendered as right angles or crisp diagonals rather than curves. Round letters are squared off into boxy forms (notably C, O, Q, and G), while joins and terminals favor straight cuts and deliberate gaps that keep shapes airy. Proportions are compact with a tight rhythm, and the overall texture reads clean and schematic in both the glyph grid and the paragraph sample.
Well-suited to interface styling, tech-themed branding, and short headline settings where its geometric character can carry the visual identity. It also works for signage and labeling where a schematic, engineered look is desirable; in longer passages, its distinctive squared forms make it best used at comfortable sizes and with generous spacing.
The tone is technical and futuristic, evoking digital displays, engineered labeling, and sci‑fi interface typography. Its rigid geometry and reduced curvature feel purposeful and machine-made, projecting a precise, constructed personality rather than a humanist one.
The design appears intended to translate a modular, grid-based aesthetic into an everyday sans, emphasizing clarity through consistent stroke behavior and simplified, angular constructions. It prioritizes a contemporary, technical voice and recognizable letterforms that read as designed objects.
Several glyphs lean on distinctive, simplified structures—such as the square bowl forms and the angular S—creating strong character at the expense of conventional softness. Numerals follow the same modular logic, with straight segments and squared bowls that keep the set visually consistent.