Sans Other Tigi 9 is a light, narrow, monoline, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: ui labels, headlines, posters, tech branding, game ui, tech, futuristic, schematic, minimal, precise, digital aesthetic, interface styling, modular system, display impact, angular, rectilinear, modular, geometric, open forms.
A crisp, rectilinear sans with uniform stroke weight and a strongly modular construction. Curves are largely replaced by squared corners and straight segments, producing open bowls and boxy counters (notably in forms like O, Q, 0, and 8). Terminals tend to end flat, with occasional deliberate gaps and simplified joins that emphasize a plotted, wireframe feel. Proportions are compact and tall, with tight interior space and a rhythm that reads like a grid-based design rather than a traditional grotesk.
Best suited to display-oriented roles where its geometric, interface-like voice is an asset: product branding in tech contexts, sci‑fi or gaming graphics, UI labels and dashboards, titles, and poster typography. It can work for short paragraphs at larger sizes, but it’s most effective for headings, captions, and punchy lines where the modular shapes stay clear.
The overall tone is technical and forward-looking, evoking digital readouts, schematics, and sci‑fi interfaces. Its controlled geometry and restrained detailing feel analytical and engineered, with a cool, minimalist character rather than friendly or expressive warmth.
The font appears designed to translate a grid-based, digital construction into a clean sans alphabet—prioritizing geometric consistency, sharp corners, and a schematic rhythm. Its atypical openings and squared bowls suggest an intention to reference electronic display logic while keeping the letterforms recognizable.
Distinctive construction choices—such as squared-off curves, occasional openings in otherwise closed shapes, and simplified diagonals—give it a purposeful, system-like consistency. The design remains legible but favors stylization over conventional text comfort, especially in smaller sizes where the angular counters and tight spacing can become visually dense.