Sans Other Ulha 9 is a regular weight, narrow, monoline, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: sci-fi ui, gaming, sports branding, posters, headlines, futuristic, technical, angular, sporty, edgy, techno styling, speed emphasis, geometric construction, display impact, octagonal, chamfered, mechanical, condensed, oblique.
A narrow, monoline sans with a pronounced oblique slant and a distinctly angular, chamfered construction. Curves are largely replaced by faceted corners and clipped terminals, giving rounds like O/C/G a squarish, octagonal feel. Strokes keep an even thickness with minimal contrast, while joins and diagonals are crisp and assertive; several letters introduce sharp notches or zig-like inflections (notably in K, S, and some diagonals). Proportions are compact with a relatively short x-height, and spacing reads tight and efficient, emphasizing a fast, streamlined texture in text.
Best suited for display settings where its faceted slant and tight, narrow proportions can read as intentional—such as sci‑fi UI graphics, game titles, esports and motorsport identities, and poster headlines. It can work for short bursts of text or labeling where a technical, engineered tone is desired, but the angular detailing is likely to feel busy in long-form reading.
The overall tone feels synthetic and forward-leaning, with a speed-and-precision attitude common to sci‑fi interfaces and motorsport branding. Its angular rhythm reads energetic and slightly aggressive, projecting a “engineered” character rather than a friendly or literary one.
The design appears intended to translate a geometric, machine-cut aesthetic into a compact oblique sans, prioritizing speed, edge, and a techno flavor. By replacing curves with chamfers and maintaining monoline strokes, it aims for a consistent, engineered look that stays distinctive at display sizes.
Uppercase forms are highly geometric and uniform in stroke treatment, while lowercase introduces more idiosyncratic shapes and occasional asymmetry, increasing the display-like personality. Numerals follow the same faceted logic, with a distinctly angular 0 and sharply constructed 4/7/9 that reinforce the technical aesthetic.