Sans Other Jaduk 22 is a regular weight, normal width, monoline, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: display, branding, posters, headlines, logos, techy, modular, geometric, quirky, distinctive sans, modular geometry, tech flavor, brand voice, rounded corners, rectilinear, high contrast shapes, square counters, open apertures.
A clean, monoline sans with a distinctly modular construction: straight stems and flat terminals pair with rounded corners and soft curves, producing a rectilinear-yet-friendly silhouette. Several letters lean on simplified geometric logic, with squared or slot-like counters (notably in the zero) and occasional open, cut-in joins that create a slightly engineered look. Proportions vary noticeably across the set, giving the rhythm a dynamic, variable-width feel while maintaining consistent stroke thickness and crisp edge definition.
Best suited to display settings where its constructed geometry can be appreciated: headlines, posters, packaging, and brand marks. It can also work well for UI accents, labels, or tech-themed graphics, especially when you want a clean sans that feels more custom than neutral system typography.
The overall tone feels technical and contemporary, with a playful edge coming from its idiosyncratic, constructed forms. It reads as modern and system-like—suggestive of interfaces, instrumentation, or modular branding—while the rounded shaping keeps it from feeling cold or purely mechanical.
The design appears intended to reinterpret a standard sans into a more modular, engineered form language—combining strict stroke consistency with simplified, geometric letter construction for a distinctive, contemporary voice.
At text sizes the simplified shapes and open joins create a distinctive texture, with some characters reading more stylized than conventional. Numerals are bold and graphic, and the slashed/slot zero is especially attention-grabbing for contexts where differentiation is useful.