Sans Other Moja 1 is a very bold, normal width, medium contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, stickers, children’s media, playful, retro, quirky, punchy, cartoonish, attention grabbing, retro flavor, playful branding, textural display, logo like, soft corners, chunky, ink-trap like, cut-in details, irregular rhythm.
A heavy, rounded sans with an energetic rightward slant and chunky, compressed shapes. Letterforms are built from broad, softened strokes with occasional wedge-like cut-ins and narrow internal notches that resemble ink-trap or stencil-style voids, creating a lively, broken texture inside otherwise solid silhouettes. Curves are generous and corners are blunted, while counters tend to be small and uneven, giving the design a bouncy, variable rhythm across the alphabet. Numerals follow the same massy construction, with simplified forms and distinctive interior cuts that add visual character at display sizes.
Best suited to display applications such as posters, headlines, packaging, labels, event graphics, and playful branding where a loud, friendly voice is desired. It works well for short phrases, titles, and logo-like wordmarks, especially when high contrast against the background helps preserve the interior details.
The overall tone is playful and slightly mischievous, with a retro poster sensibility and a hand-cut, punchy attitude. Its exaggerated weight and quirky interior cutouts make it feel bold, informal, and attention-seeking rather than neutral or corporate.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum impact with a soft, approachable silhouette while using deliberate interior cuts to add personality and a distinctive texture. It prioritizes expressive display presence over quiet readability, aiming for a memorable, characterful look.
The interior cut-ins and tight counters can visually fill in at smaller sizes, so the design reads most clearly when given room to breathe. The italicized slant and uneven internal detailing introduce strong texture across lines, which is effective for short bursts of text but can become visually busy in dense paragraphs.