Sans Other Bumof 4 is a regular weight, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, logos, packaging, angular, quirky, assertive, techy, retro, distinctiveness, display impact, edgy modernity, geometric styling, chiseled, faceted, spiky, ink-trap hints, wedged terminals.
A crisp, angular sans with faceted strokes and frequent wedge-like cuts that create a chiseled, almost engraved silhouette. Curves are tightened and often resolve into pointed joins, while horizontals and diagonals finish in sharp, chamfered terminals. Stroke endings sometimes show small notches and taper-like cuts that read as ink-trap-inspired detailing, giving counters a slightly pinched, engineered feel. The overall rhythm is compact and energetic, with sturdy verticals and geometric construction that favors straight edges over smooth rounds.
Best suited to headlines, poster typography, packaging, and branding where the distinctive faceted texture can be a feature. It can also work for logo wordmarks and UI/display labeling when a sharp, engineered personality is desired, but it will be most effective in short bursts rather than dense reading settings.
The tone is bold and a bit mischievous: it mixes a technical, engineered sharpness with a retro display attitude. The pointed joins and cut-in terminals add tension and motion, making the face feel lively rather than neutral. It reads as modern-quirky, with a hint of sci‑fi or arcade-era flavor.
The design appears intended to deliver a recognizable, angular voice within a sans framework—prioritizing strong silhouettes, sharp terminals, and a crafted, cut-stroke texture that stands out in display sizes.
Uppercase forms show strong, graphic silhouettes with pronounced angularity, while the lowercase stays legible but retains the same faceted logic in shoulders, bowls, and diagonals. Numerals echo the same cut terminal treatment, producing a cohesive set for headline and short-run typographic work. In longer text, the sharp detailing becomes a visible texture, so spacing and size will strongly affect perceived smoothness.