Sans Other Jise 6 is a regular weight, very wide, monoline, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, display, branding, posters, ui titles, futuristic, techno, digital, geometric, modular, sci-fi styling, digital signage, geometric system, high impact, angular, square, extended, open apertures, stencil-like.
A geometric, extended sans with monoline strokes and a strongly rectilinear construction. Forms are built from squared curves, crisp 90° corners, and occasional diagonal joins, producing a modular, almost blueprint-like rhythm. Counters tend to be boxy and open, with several letters using deliberate gaps and simplified terminals that read as stencil-like cut-ins. The x-height is high and the overall proportions feel horizontally stretched, giving the type a broad, low-contrast texture that stays consistent across uppercase, lowercase, and numerals.
Best suited for display contexts where its angular geometry can read clearly—headlines, poster typography, tech branding, product marks, and UI titles or splash screens. It can also work for short labels and alphanumeric-heavy settings (e.g., model names or interfaces) when set with generous spacing and sufficient size.
The font projects a distinctly futuristic, interface-driven tone—clean, engineered, and slightly game-like. Its squared geometry and intentional openings evoke digital displays, sci‑fi signage, and industrial labeling rather than conventional editorial neutrality.
The design appears intended to translate a strict geometric grid into an approachable sans, emphasizing a wide stance, squared curves, and modular openings to create a contemporary techno voice. It prioritizes stylistic impact and system coherence across letters and figures over traditional text-face softness.
Letterforms rely on reduced curves and open joins, which increases distinctiveness but can introduce a mildly fragmented look at smaller sizes. Numerals match the same squared logic and maintain a strong, grid-aligned presence, supporting a cohesive system feel in mixed alphanumeric strings.