Stencil Gena 10 is a regular weight, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Articulo' by Gilar Studio, 'Catesque' by Gumpita Rahayu, 'Gotham' by Hoefler & Co., 'Maison Neue' by Milieu Grotesque, 'Duty' by T-26, 'Mundial Narrow' by TipoType, 'TT Norms Pro' by TypeType, and 'Eastman Grotesque' by Zetafonts (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: posters, headlines, signage, branding, packaging, industrial, utilitarian, technical, modernist, stencil aesthetic, industrial labeling, display impact, systematic design, geometric, high-contrast breaks, mechanical, crisp, bold presence.
A geometric sans with pronounced stencil breaks that cut through stems and bowls using clean, straight bridges. Stroke weight appears even and solid, with squared terminals and a generally low-contrast, constructed feel. Counters are fairly open, and circular forms (like O/Q/0) are built from near-round shapes interrupted by consistent vertical splits. The overall rhythm is tight and disciplined, with letterforms that read as engineered rather than calligraphic.
Works best where the stencil texture can be appreciated: posters, large headings, signage, labels, and brand marks that want an industrial or technical edge. It can also function in short text bursts or pull quotes, but the repeated breaks become more visually active as copy gets longer.
The font projects an industrial, functional tone—confident, no-nonsense, and slightly austere. The repeated stencil gaps introduce a technical, fabricated character that evokes labeling, equipment markings, and modular design systems.
Likely designed to deliver a modern stencil look that remains clear and consistent across a full alphanumeric set. The goal appears to be combining strong geometric construction with uniform, easily repeatable bridges suited to bold display typography and practical marking-inspired graphics.
Stencil breaks are applied systematically across both uppercase and lowercase, becoming a defining texture at text sizes. Diagonals (A, V, W, X, Y, Z) remain sharp and angular, while joins and curves stay clean and controlled, reinforcing a precise, machine-made impression.