Sans Other Ifje 3 is a bold, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, packaging, logos, signage, playful, retro, friendly, chunky, poster-like, impact, nostalgia, approachability, branding, display, rounded, soft corners, blocky, compact, high contrast counters.
A heavy, compact display sans with squared proportions and generously rounded corners. Strokes are consistently thick with minimal modulation, producing a solid, blocky texture, while terminals often finish with softened, bracket-like shaping that adds a slightly carved feel. Counters are relatively small and geometric, with a strong, uniform rhythm across capitals and lowercase; forms like the W/V show deep central joins and the numerals are wide and sturdy with simplified interior spaces. Overall spacing and silhouette favor impact and cohesion over delicate detail, making the face read as a dense, punchy headline style.
Best suited to short, bold statements where the dense texture can do the work—posters, headlines, signage, label and packaging systems, and logo wordmarks. It performs particularly well in large sizes where the rounded corners and distinctive terminals remain clear and contribute to a memorable brand voice.
The tone is upbeat and vintage-leaning, suggesting mid-century signage and playful packaging rather than a strictly modern corporate voice. Its rounded massing and compact shapes feel approachable and a bit mischievous, with enough quirk in the terminals and joins to keep it lively in large sizes.
The likely intention is to provide a strong-impact display sans that feels friendly and retro, combining simple geometric construction with softened, decorative terminal treatments. It prioritizes silhouette and personality for attention-grabbing typography rather than neutral, long-form reading.
The design’s tight apertures and small counters create strong color and presence, but also make fine details merge quickly as size decreases. The quirky terminal shaping is a defining feature and is most noticeable in letters with horizontal arms and in the lowercase, where it adds a distinctive, slightly decorative accent without becoming script-like.