Sans Other Gima 9 is a very bold, wide, medium contrast, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, packaging, titles, playful, chunky, retro, quirky, bubbly, attention grabbing, distinctive texture, retro display, playful branding, rounded, soft corners, geometric, stencil-like, crisp edges.
A heavy, rounded sans with compact counters, softened corners, and a blocky, geometric silhouette. Many letters show deliberate internal breaks and notch-like cut-ins that create a semi-stencil feel, producing distinctive negative shapes inside bowls and at joins. Curves are broad and smooth, while horizontals and terminals read as flat and substantial, giving the design a dense, poster-forward color. The rhythm is intentionally irregular in its internal cut details, yet the overall stroke mass and proportions stay consistent across caps, lowercase, and numerals.
Best suited to display settings where its chunky forms and idiosyncratic cutouts can be appreciated—headlines, poster typography, branding marks, packaging, and short punchy statements. It can work for playful editorial titling or event graphics, but the dense counters and internal interruptions may reduce clarity at small sizes or in text-heavy layouts.
The font feels energetic and mischievous, mixing friendly rounded forms with unexpected cutouts that add a crafty, puzzle-like character. Its strong black shapes and quirky inner openings evoke retro display lettering and playful packaging aesthetics rather than neutral utilitarian signage.
Likely designed as an attention-grabbing display sans that balances bold, rounded geometry with atypical internal cut details to create a memorable, branded voice. The goal appears to be instant impact and a distinctive texture in large-setting typography rather than quiet, minimal neutrality.
Counters are often small and sometimes interrupted by the internal breaks, which increases texture and personality in longer lines. Round letters (O, Q, C, G) emphasize the soft, inflated geometry, while several glyphs introduce distinctive “bite” shapes that act like signature details at larger sizes.