Sans Other Judas 1 is a bold, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, signage, packaging, logos, industrial, technical, stenciled, utilitarian, retro, industrial voice, stencil effect, tech branding, modular system, octagonal, chamfered, notched, modular, angular.
A rigid, geometric sans built from straight strokes with chamfered corners and frequent small cut-ins that create a segmented, almost stencil-like construction. Curves are largely replaced by faceted arcs, giving rounds like O, C, G, and 8 an octagonal feel. The uppercase is tall and compact with squared counters, while the lowercase keeps a similarly engineered rhythm, using simplified bowls and clipped terminals. Spacing and sidebearings feel deliberately uneven across glyphs, reinforcing a mechanical, modular texture in text.
Best suited to display sizes where the chamfers and cut-ins remain clear—headlines, posters, signage, product labels, and logo wordmarks. It can also work for UI titles or section headers in tech or industrial themes, but the segmented detailing may become busy at small text sizes.
The overall tone is industrial and technical, with a machine-made, fabricated character that reads as functional rather than friendly. Its notches and hard angles evoke labeling, equipment markings, and retro-futuristic display lettering, lending a slightly militaristic or sci‑fi edge without ornamental flourishes.
The design appears intended to translate a plain sans into a fabricated, modular system—using clipped corners and strategic notches to suggest stenciling, engraved plates, or machined parts. It prioritizes a strong, engineered silhouette and a consistent angular motif for high-impact branding and thematic typography.
Distinctive cutaways appear in many joints and terminals, producing consistent internal “gaps” that help prevent heavy black buildup and add a coded, panel-cut aesthetic. Numerals follow the same faceted logic, with 0/8/9 showing segmented round forms and strong vertical emphasis.