Sans Other Tiha 4 is a light, narrow, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, packaging, ui labels, techno, modular, futuristic, digital, architectural, display focus, tech aesthetic, modular system, constructed geometry, rectilinear, angular, geometric, octagonal, boxy.
A rectilinear sans built from straight strokes and hard corners, with minimal to no curvature and frequent squared terminals. Counters and bowls are formed as open, box-like shapes, and diagonals appear sparingly, giving the design a modular, constructed feel. The rhythm is compact and linear, with tight apertures and an overall squarish footprint that keeps forms tall and contained. Uppercase and lowercase share a consistent, schematic geometry, and numerals follow the same angular, technical logic.
Best suited for headlines, short branding lines, and display applications where its angular construction can be appreciated. It can work well for sci‑fi or tech-themed posters, product packaging, interface labels, and signage-style titling, especially when generous tracking and size help preserve clarity.
The font reads as technical and futuristic, evoking digital displays, industrial labeling, and modular UI aesthetics. Its strict geometry and clipped joins create a cool, engineered tone rather than a friendly or calligraphic one.
The design appears intended to translate a grid-and-stroke system into a readable sans, prioritizing a distinctive modular silhouette over conventional curves. Its consistent rectilinear grammar suggests an aim toward a constructed, techno-architectural voice for modern display typography.
Because many glyphs rely on open corners and narrow apertures (notably in C/G/S-like forms), the design is most distinctive at medium to large sizes where its construction is easy to parse. The repeated use of squared terminals and step-like diagonals reinforces a systemized, grid-based personality across letters and figures.