Sans Other Bulem 6 is a regular weight, wide, medium contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, packaging, signage, dynamic, stylized, retro, expressive, playful, motion, display impact, distinctiveness, retro flavor, flared strokes, wedge terminals, soft curves, calligraphic, forward slant.
A stylized, forward-leaning sans with softly modulated strokes and frequent flared, wedge-like terminals. Forms favor broad, rounded counters and sweeping curves, with a subtly calligraphic rhythm that alternates between thickened turns and tapered ends. Caps are wide and open, while lowercase maintains a steady x-height with compact ascenders/descenders and lively, angled joins. Overall spacing and silhouettes feel generous and flowing, prioritizing motion and shape over rigid geometry.
Well suited for headlines, posters, and branding where a dynamic, stylized voice is desired. It can work effectively on packaging and signage, especially when set at larger sizes where the wedge terminals and curved modulation remain crisp. For longer reading, it’s best used sparingly as a display accent rather than body text.
The tone is energetic and slightly theatrical, with a retro-leaning display flavor. Its slanted posture and flared endings suggest speed and showmanship, while the rounded counters keep it approachable and playful. The style reads as decorative but not overly ornate, balancing personality with clarity at headline sizes.
The design appears intended to deliver an italicized sense of motion with a distinctive, flared-terminal construction that feels modern yet retro-inflected. It aims to provide a recognizable display texture—open, wide shapes with calligraphic modulation—optimized for impact in short, prominent typographic applications.
Several characters show distinctive, carved-in negative shapes and angled cut-ins that add sparkle in large sizes. Numerals and caps share the same sweeping, tapered logic, creating a cohesive, sign-like texture across mixed-case settings. In dense paragraphs the strong slant and active terminals can become visually busy, but they add standout character for short strings.