Sans Other Kebol 15 is a regular weight, narrow, monoline, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, logotypes, packaging, titles, art deco, retro, playful, elegant, whimsical, deco revival, display impact, distinctiveness, geometric clarity, geometric, stylized, rounded, tall, high-contrast forms.
A stylized monoline sans with tall, narrow proportions and a distinctly geometric construction. Strokes are consistently even, with rounded terminals and smooth curves that contrast with long verticals, giving an airy, columnar rhythm. Several glyphs feature decorative internal shapes (notably circular counters and dot motifs), and some characters use simplified, almost sign-like forms that emphasize silhouette over conventional detailing. The overall spacing and letterfit feel open, and the outlines favor clean arcs and straight stems rather than calligraphic modulation.
Best suited to display settings where its decorative counters and elongated geometry can be appreciated: posters, headlines, event branding, packaging, and logo wordmarks. It also works well for short editorial titles or pull quotes, especially when paired with a more neutral text face for body copy.
The design reads as retro and theatrical, with a clear Art Deco influence and a light, playful eccentricity. Its ornamented counters and elongated stance give it a boutique, nightlife, or poster-era flavor while staying tidy and modern enough for display use.
The font appears intended to evoke a classic Deco-era sensibility through geometric construction, monoline strokes, and tall proportions, while adding distinctive dot-and-ring motifs for recognizability. Its design prioritizes personality and silhouette for display impact rather than strict neutrality or maximum small-size legibility.
Distinctive details—like ring-and-dot treatments in round letters and occasional asymmetric or unconventional joins—make the font highly characterful and less suited to dense, small-size reading. Numerals follow the same streamlined, rounded geometry and maintain the tall, narrow rhythm established by the capitals.