Sans Other Turul 9 is a regular weight, very narrow, monoline, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, signage, logotypes, packaging, art deco, retro, architectural, stylized, theatrical, retro styling, display impact, signage feel, condensed elegance, geometric, condensed, linear, angular, rounded corners.
A highly condensed, monoline display sans with tall proportions and a crisp, constructed feel. Strokes maintain an even thickness with frequent squared terminals, while bowls and shoulders are often reduced to tight curves or open forms, creating a rhythmic mix of straight verticals and restrained rounding. Counters tend to be narrow and the overall spacing feels compact, giving words a stacked, vertical emphasis. Details such as simplified joins, occasional cut-in notches, and geometric shaping in letters like S, G, and R reinforce a deliberate, engineered silhouette.
Best suited to display settings where its narrow, decorative structure can be appreciated—posters, headlines, event graphics, signage, packaging, and brand marks. It works well when set with ample size and breathing room, and can be especially effective for retro-themed identities or editorial titles needing a distinctive vertical rhythm.
The tone reads strongly vintage and theatrical, evoking early 20th‑century signage and Art Deco-era lettering. Its sharp verticality and stylized forms feel elegant yet slightly quirky, lending a boutique, poster-like character rather than a neutral utilitarian voice.
The design appears intended to reinterpret condensed geometric sans lettering with a period-inspired, decorative twist—prioritizing silhouette, rhythm, and vintage character for attention-grabbing display typography.
Distinctive letterforms increase personality but can reduce comfort at small sizes, especially where openings and counters become tight. The numerals follow the same tall, linear logic, with several digits adopting simplified, almost modular constructions that match the font’s sign-painter/lettering sensibility.