Sans Other Remuz 3 is a bold, very narrow, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, logotypes, packaging, signage, industrial, techno, modular, retro, utilitarian, grid construction, display impact, tech aesthetic, compact setting, rectilinear, squared, condensed, geometric, monoline.
A rectilinear, condensed sans built from straight strokes and squared turns, with rounded corners kept to a minimum. Counters and apertures are narrow and often rendered as rectangular cut-ins, creating a modular, stencil-like rhythm. Vertical stems dominate and terminals tend to finish flat, giving the face a tall, rigid silhouette. Spacing reads tight and mechanical, with simplified curves (notably in C/G/S and the bowls) expressed as blocky, stepped forms.
Best suited for short to medium headline settings where its condensed, modular shapes can read as a deliberate stylistic choice. It works well on posters, techno or industrial branding, packaging labels, and signage-style graphics, especially when set with generous line spacing to avoid a dense texture.
The overall tone is industrial and techno, evoking electronic displays, engineered labeling, and retro-futurist graphics. Its rigid geometry and compressed proportions feel purposeful and utilitarian rather than friendly or casual, lending a controlled, machine-made voice to headlines.
The design appears intended to translate a geometric, grid-based construction into a compact display sans with strong presence. By reducing curves to squared forms and introducing consistent cut-ins, it aims to create a distinctive, engineered look that stands out in titles and branding.
Distinctive internal cutouts and small notches appear across multiple letters, reinforcing a constructed, template-driven aesthetic. Numerals and lowercase follow the same squared logic, keeping the texture consistent in mixed-case settings while emphasizing verticality and a crisp, high-impact pattern.