Sans Other Kogiv 6 is a regular weight, normal width, medium contrast, italic, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Demoise Sans Serif' by Maculinc (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: branding, posters, headlines, packaging, ui labels, dynamic, modernist, sporty, confident, technical, motion, emphasis, modernity, clarity, impact, oblique, geometric, angular, crisp, compact.
A slanted sans with compact proportions, smooth curves, and sharp, angled joins that give the outlines a brisk rhythm. Strokes are generally uniform with modest contrast, and terminals are clean and mostly open, avoiding overt serif-like finishing. The uppercase shows geometric construction with broad bowls (C, G, O) and strong diagonals (K, N, V, W, X), while the lowercase keeps single-storey forms and rounded counters that remain clear at text sizes. Numerals follow the same forward-leaning, streamlined logic, with wide, open shapes and straightforward detailing.
Well-suited to branding and display typography where a sense of speed or forward motion is desirable, such as sports, automotive, tech, and contemporary lifestyle graphics. It can also work for short UI labels, calls-to-action, and compact headings, where the oblique posture adds emphasis without needing heavy weight. For extended reading, it’s best used in shorter passages or pull quotes due to the persistent slant and energetic rhythm.
The overall tone feels fast and purposeful, evoking motion and contemporary utility. Its oblique stance and crisp angularity suggest a sporty, engineered sensibility rather than a neutral, quiet voice. The result is assertive and energetic while staying relatively clean and legible.
The likely intention is a contemporary oblique sans that communicates motion, efficiency, and modernity through geometric shapes and assertive diagonals. It appears designed to balance personality with practical legibility, offering a distinctive italic voice for display and emphasis-oriented settings.
The design relies on consistent slant and tight internal spacing to create momentum, with diagonals doing much of the expressive work. Curved letters maintain generous apertures, helping the italicized forms avoid looking cramped in running text.