Sans Other Jadat 15 is a regular weight, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logotypes, packaging, ui display, futuristic, techno, space-age, geometric, industrial, sci-fi branding, interface tone, geometric clarity, distinctiveness, rounded corners, square counters, stencil-like, modular, high-contrast apertures.
A geometric sans with monoline strokes and a distinctly modular construction. Letterforms blend squared bowls and counters with generous rounding at corners, producing a smooth-yet-technical silhouette. Many glyphs show segmented strokes and open terminals that read as deliberate cut-ins, giving several shapes a subtle stencil-like behavior. Proportions are compact and steady, with wide, flattened curves (notably in bowls) and straight-sided stems that keep the texture even in lines of text.
Best suited to headlines, titles, posters, and identity work where its constructed shapes can read clearly and add personality. It also fits interface display text, product labeling, and packaging that benefits from a modern, technical voice. For longer reading, it will be most effective when given ample size, spacing, or shorter line lengths.
The overall tone feels futuristic and engineered—clean, synthetic, and slightly game/UI oriented. Its mix of rounded geometry and purposeful breaks suggests sci‑fi interfaces, industrial labeling, and contemporary tech branding rather than traditional editorial typography.
The design appears intended to deliver a distinctive techno-geometric voice while staying clean and usable in contemporary layouts. By combining rounded-square geometry with strategic openings and simplified curves, it aims for a futuristic look that remains systematic and consistent across the alphabet and numerals.
Distinctive internal cutaways and squared counters make the design highly recognizable at display sizes, but they also introduce a strong pattern that can dominate dense paragraphs. The numerals and capitals carry the most graphic character, and the consistent stroke weight helps maintain cohesion across mixed-case settings.