Sans Other Duki 3 is a very bold, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, signage, logos, packaging, retro, western, playful, punchy, rugged, headline impact, vintage signage, decorative texture, brand voice, blocky, stencil-like, notched, wedge-cut, heavy.
A heavy, block-built display sans with squared counters and distinctive wedge-cut notches that create a chiseled, semi-stencil texture. Terminals are mostly flat and abrupt, with occasional curved bulges and scooped joins that soften the geometry and add a hand-cut feel. The glyphs show strong internal shaping—small apertures, compact counters, and carved-in corners—producing a high-ink, poster-ready silhouette. Lowercase forms echo the uppercase structure with similarly notched bowls and a sturdy, compact rhythm, while numerals follow the same chunky, cut-in logic for consistent color.
Best suited for large-size applications such as posters, headlines, storefront-style signage, and brand marks where the notched, cut-in detailing can be appreciated. It can also work well on packaging and labels that benefit from a bold, retro display voice, especially when set with generous spacing or short lines.
The overall tone is bold and theatrical, evoking vintage signage and headline typography with a slightly mischievous, saloon-poster energy. The carved details and blunt massing read as confident and attention-seeking rather than refined, giving the face a playful toughness suited to display-driven communication.
The font appears designed to deliver maximum impact with a distinctive carved texture—combining a blocky sans foundation with ornamental notches to suggest hand-cut, vintage display lettering. Its consistent chiseled motifs across uppercase, lowercase, and figures indicate an intention to provide a cohesive, characterful headline system.
The design’s signature is the repeated wedge incisions and angular scoops across stems, joins, and bowls, which create a distinctive texture even in short words. In longer lines, the dense color and tight internal openings can make the text feel compact, reinforcing its role as a statement face rather than a quiet workhorse.