Sans Other Turir 1 is a light, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'FF Signa' by FontFont (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: ui text, product design, wayfinding, presentations, editorial, clean, modern, neutral, techy, utilitarian, legibility, clarity, neutrality, system fit, modern utility, monolinear, open apertures, generous spacing, geometric, crisp.
This typeface is a monolinear sans with crisp, clean outlines and a generally open, uncluttered construction. Curves are smooth and near-geometric in feel, with round bowls and circular counters in letters like O and Q, while straight-sided forms (H, N, M) stay rigid and even. The lowercase shows simple, contemporary shapes with a double-storey “g” and a single-storey “a,” plus straightforward terminals that read as cut square or lightly rounded rather than flared. Overall spacing feels airy, and the rhythm is even, producing a clear, quiet texture in running text.
It should perform well in UI and product contexts where clarity at small to medium sizes matters, as well as in dashboards, forms, and documentation. The clean, even rhythm also suits presentations and editorial layouts that call for a modern, unobtrusive sans, and it can extend to signage and wayfinding where open shapes aid quick recognition.
The tone is neutral and modern, leaning toward a practical, system-like clarity rather than a distinctive historical voice. Its restrained forms and open counters give it a calm, efficient presence suitable for informational and interface-forward settings.
The design appears intended to deliver straightforward legibility with a contemporary, no-nonsense aesthetic. Its consistent stroke behavior and open forms suggest a focus on dependable everyday typography rather than expressive display styling.
Capitals are proportioned with a balanced, slightly geometric stance, and diagonals (V, W, X, Y) appear sharp and consistent. Numerals are simple and readable, with a clean “1” and open, rounded forms for “0,” “6,” “8,” and “9,” keeping a uniform, contemporary appearance across the set.