Stencil Geri 7 is a regular weight, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, branding, signage, packaging, labels, industrial, technical, modern, modular, utilitarian, stencil utility, industrial labeling, modern signage, modular system, geometric, segmented, bridged, high-contrast forms, crisp edges.
A geometric sans with consistent, monoline strokes and deliberate stencil breaks that create clear bridges through bowls and verticals. Letterforms are built from clean verticals, near-circular curves, and squared terminals, producing a crisp, modular rhythm. Counters tend to be open and simplified, with several glyphs showing prominent internal cut-ins and split strokes (notably in rounded characters and numerals), giving the set a segmented, constructed look. Overall proportions feel balanced and straightforward, with a sturdy baseline presence and compact, efficient shapes.
Best suited for display typography where the stencil construction can be appreciated: posters, product branding, packaging, signage, labels, and title treatments. It can also work for short technical headings or UI/overlay text when a rugged, fabricated feel is desired, though the breaks may reduce clarity at very small sizes.
The repeated breaks and engineered geometry give the font an industrial, technical tone—functional rather than expressive. It reads as contemporary and system-like, suggesting labeling, equipment, or wayfinding aesthetics.
The design appears intended to combine a clean geometric sans foundation with unmistakable stencil bridging, creating a practical, manufactured aesthetic that remains orderly and contemporary. It prioritizes a consistent stroke system and repeatable cut patterns to evoke construction, marking, and industrial graphics.
The stencil bridges are visually prominent and consistent across the alphabet, adding texture without introducing flourish. Round glyphs maintain a strong circular logic, while straight-sided letters keep a uniform stroke behavior that supports even color in lines of text, especially at display sizes.