Sans Other Jiri 7 is a regular weight, very wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, logos, packaging, techno, futuristic, architectural, digital, sci‑fi, digital aesthetic, sci‑fi styling, modular system, geometric display, rectilinear, modular, angular, square, geometric.
A rectilinear, modular sans built from uniform stroke thickness and hard right-angle turns. Letterforms are largely constructed from straight segments with squared terminals and generous open counters, producing a crisp, schematic texture. Curves are minimized or replaced by chamfered corners, and several glyphs use deliberate breaks and stepped joins that emphasize a constructed, grid-driven logic. Overall spacing reads open and horizontal, with a wide stance and a rhythmic pattern of long horizontals and tall verticals that keeps lines looking clean and orderly.
Best for attention-grabbing headlines, titles, and short bursts of copy where its geometric construction can read as intentional and expressive. It fits technology-forward branding, sci‑fi or gaming visuals, and graphic layouts that lean on grids and sharp shapes.
The font conveys a distinctly futuristic, digital tone—cool, technical, and engineered. Its angular geometry and segmented strokes evoke interfaces, display readouts, and sci‑fi worldbuilding, giving text an assertive, synthetic presence.
The design appears intended to translate a grid-based, techno aesthetic into an all-purpose sans structure, prioritizing a clean modular system over traditional curves. It aims to feel modern and synthetic while remaining legible enough for display typography.
Diagonal elements are used sparingly and feel sharply cut, while many round characters are interpreted as squared forms, reinforcing the mechanical feel. The consistent stroke weight keeps the design coherent, but the stylized construction makes it better suited to display settings than extended small-size reading.