Sans Other Bukon 6 is a regular weight, very wide, very high contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, magazine, packaging, fashion, futuristic, editorial, dynamic, sleek, display impact, stylized italic, brand voice, experimental contrast, high-contrast, slanted, geometric, flared terminals, sharp joins.
A high-contrast italic sans with expanded proportions and a distinctly calligraphic stress. Strokes alternate between hairline-thin connections and heavy, wedge-like masses, often pooling into teardrop and blade forms at curves and terminals. Bowls and counters stay broadly geometric and open, while diagonals and joins are crisp and angular, creating a lively rhythm and occasional asymmetry from letter to letter. Figures echo the same logic, mixing clean arcs with abrupt thick wedges for a dramatic, display-led texture.
Best suited to large sizes where the hairlines and wedge contrasts can be appreciated—headlines, editorial titling, fashion and culture branding, posters, and striking packaging. It can also work for short UI hero text or campaign lockups, but extended small-size reading will be more challenging due to the extreme contrast and stylized forms.
The overall tone feels fashion-forward and experimental, pairing elegance from the hairline strokes with a sharp, engineered edge from the wedge contrasts. It reads as energetic and contemporary, with a slightly futuristic, poster-like punch that prioritizes style and motion over neutrality.
The design appears intended to reinterpret an italic sans into a dramatic display voice, using exaggerated contrast and flared wedge terminals to create a distinctive silhouette. Its construction suggests a focus on memorable word shapes and visual rhythm for contemporary branding and editorial impact rather than utilitarian text setting.
The glyph set shows noticeable width variation across characters, which adds a kinetic, custom-built feel in words. Dots and small details (like the i/j tittle) are compact and crisp, while rounded letters emphasize the signature heavy “ink traps”/teardrop-like weighting that becomes a defining motif in text.