Serif Other Ufhe 7 is a regular weight, very wide, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, branding, posters, sports identity, tech ui, futuristic, technical, sleek, sporty, retro sci‑fi, futurist display, speed emphasis, tech branding, hybrid serif, rounded, extended, streamlined, soft-cornered, geometric.
A wide, forward-leaning serifed design with streamlined, rounded-rectangle geometry and consistently softened corners. Strokes stay even and monolinear, with subtle, integrated serif cues that read more as shaped terminals and small bracket-like flares than traditional wedges. Counters are roomy and squarish (notably in O, D, and 0), while horizontals and joins are clean and mechanical, giving the set a crisp, engineered rhythm. Numerals and capitals share the same extended proportions, producing a stable, low-noise texture in text despite the strong slant.
Best suited to headlines, titles, and brand marks where width and slant can signal motion and modernity. It also fits product packaging, esports or motorsport-style identities, and interface labeling where geometric clarity and a futuristic flavor are desired. In longer passages it remains legible, but its strong personality makes it most effective for short-to-medium display text.
The overall tone feels tech-forward and aerodynamic, like labeling found on hardware, vehicles, or speculative interfaces. Its rounded corners keep it approachable, while the italic stance and extended width add speed and assertiveness. The result reads as retro-futurist rather than classical, with a controlled, high-design finish.
The design appears intended to merge serif cues with a geometric, rounded-rect construction, creating a distinctive hybrid that feels both engineered and stylized. Its extended proportions and italic posture suggest an emphasis on speed, modernity, and a contemporary “tech” voice while keeping forms friendly through softened corners.
Letterforms emphasize squared bowls and rounded interior corners, creating a distinctive "capsule" silhouette across the alphabet. The italic angle is steady and applied consistently, helping long lines keep momentum. Some characters show slightly more sculpted terminals (e.g., S, J, and y), reinforcing the decorative, display-leaning personality while remaining coherent in continuous text.