Sans Other Kokip 8 is a regular weight, normal width, medium contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, packaging, headlines, branding, stickers, hand-cut, quirky, expressive, casual, energetic, handmade feel, add energy, standout headlines, casual branding, angular, chiseled, roughened, asymmetric, organic.
This typeface is an italic-leaning sans with a hand-cut, slightly irregular construction. Strokes look like they were shaped with a knife or chisel: terminals are blunt, corners are faceted, and curves are built from angled segments rather than smooth arcs. The rhythm is lively and uneven in a controlled way, with subtle variation in character widths and occasional wobble in verticals and diagonals. Counters stay fairly open and the overall color is solid, while the outlines retain a rough, organic edge that reads clearly at display sizes.
It suits short-form, high-impact typography such as posters, packaging callouts, event graphics, and expressive branding where a handmade, energetic voice is desirable. It can also work for pull quotes or section headers, especially when you want a casual, crafted feel over strict geometric consistency.
The tone feels informal and handmade, combining a playful roughness with a bold, poster-like presence. Its slanted stance and jagged geometry give it motion and attitude, suggesting indie, DIY, or street-level energy rather than polished corporate neutrality.
The design appears intended to capture the immediacy of hand-lettered signage in a consistent digital font, pairing an italic slant with faceted, chiseled outlines for personality and momentum. The goal seems to be legibility with character—clean enough to read, but rough enough to feel human and distinctive.
Capitals have a compact, punchy silhouette with simplified forms and clipped joins, while lowercase maintains straightforward sans structure but keeps the same faceted, cut-paper edge. Numerals follow the same angular logic, with distinctive, slightly uneven contours that reinforce the hand-drawn character.