Sans Other Sedi 3 is a light, narrow, monoline, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, ui labels, wayfinding, packaging, techy, futuristic, schematic, minimal, edgy, sci-fi branding, technical labeling, display impact, geometric experimentation, angular, geometric, rectilinear, modular, stencil-like.
A rectilinear, angular sans built from straight strokes and hard corners, with near-monoline weight and minimal curvature. Counters and bowls are squared-off and often open, creating a modular, plotted feel. Proportions lean tall with compact widths, and many joins resolve into crisp right angles or sharp diagonals, producing a tightly gridded rhythm. The overall texture is airy and precise, with deliberate gaps and simplified terminals that keep shapes clean at display sizes.
Best suited to headlines, short calls-to-action, and branded titling where the angular construction reads as intentional style. It can work for UI labels, tech-themed graphics, and wayfinding-style signage when sizes are sufficiently large and spacing is opened up. For long passages, its unconventional forms and narrow set may feel fatiguing, so it’s better as an accent than a workhorse text face.
The tone feels technical and futuristic, like a schematic label or digital interface typography. Its sharp geometry and engineered rhythm also suggest an industrial, slightly dystopian edge—more “system” than “humanist.”
The design appears aimed at delivering a constructed, grid-based sans with a distinctly modern/tech character. By prioritizing straight segments, squared counters, and crisp terminals, it creates a recognizable voice for sci‑fi, digital, and industrial visual systems.
Several glyphs use distinctive constructed forms (notably angular diagonals and squared apertures) that emphasize a designed, coded aesthetic over conventional readability. The simplified curves and occasional open shapes make it most confident when set with generous tracking and at larger sizes.