Sans Other Tinu 1 is a light, very narrow, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, game ui, tech labels, technical, futuristic, minimal, architectural, geometric, sci‑fi aesthetic, space efficiency, geometric construction, interface clarity, condensed, linear, angular, rectilinear, wireframe.
A highly condensed, monoline sans built from rectilinear strokes and squared corners, with occasional chamfered terminals and sparse curves. Proportions are tall and narrow with generous internal whitespace, giving many forms a drawn-with-a-ruler, wireframe feel. Counters tend to be rectangular, bowls are boxy (notably in B, D, O, P, R), and diagonals appear selectively in letters like A, K, V, W, X, and Y to maintain a technical rhythm. The lowercase follows the same constructed logic, with single-storey a and g, a compact, squared e, and straight-stemmed ascenders and descenders; numerals are similarly linear, with an angular 2 and a segmented, octagonal-style 0/8.
Best suited to display settings where its condensed geometry becomes a feature—headlines, posters, logotypes, packaging callouts, and tech-themed branding. It also fits on-screen labeling such as game UI, dashboards, and sci‑fi interface graphics where tight width and a constructed aesthetic are advantageous.
The overall tone is sleek and engineered, evoking interface labeling, schematic lettering, and retro-futurist display typography. Its narrow stance and linear construction read as efficient and precise, with a distinctly synthetic, techno flavor rather than a humanist voice.
The letterforms appear intentionally constructed from straight segments and squared curves to project a modern, engineered personality while maximizing economy of width. The design prioritizes a distinctive, technical silhouette and consistent geometric rules over conventional text comfort.
Spacing and stroke economy create a strong vertical cadence in text, while the squared joins and box counters can reduce letter differentiation at small sizes. The design’s consistent geometry helps it feel cohesive across caps, lowercase, and figures, making it especially characteristic in headings and short runs.