Sans Other Kodib 7 is a bold, very narrow, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, sports branding, packaging, signage, retro, sporty, industrial, energetic, assertive, space saving, impact, motion cue, retro utility, headline focus, oblique, condensed, tall, angular, compact.
A tall, tightly packed sans with a pronounced rightward slant and compact proportions. Strokes are heavy and even, with mostly squared terminals and occasional rounded joins, creating a firm, blocky texture. Counters are narrow and vertically oriented, and curves are pulled into slightly angular forms that keep the overall rhythm brisk. The design maintains a consistent, streamlined silhouette across capitals, lowercase, and numerals, prioritizing strong verticals and clear, simplified interior shapes.
Works best for high-impact headlines, posters, and branding where a fast, compressed look is desirable. It suits sports, motorsport, industrial, and tech-forward themes, and can perform well in signage or packaging that needs strong presence in limited horizontal space. For longer reading, it is more effective in short bursts—titles, labels, and callouts—rather than extended body text.
The font conveys speed and urgency with a distinctly retro, mechanical flavor. Its compressed, forward-leaning stance feels sporty and assertive, suggesting motion and impact rather than softness or nuance. The overall tone is confident and utilitarian, with a display-like presence that reads as bold and energetic.
Likely designed to deliver a condensed, forward-leaning display voice that maximizes impact while saving horizontal space. The uniform stroke weight and squared-off construction suggest an intention toward robust reproduction and a crisp, engineered feel in branding and headline settings.
The sample text shows dense word shapes with a strong diagonal flow, where spacing and narrow counters create a dark, cohesive typographic color. Numerals and capitals share the same condensed, upright-leaning architecture, supporting a unified headline system. The compact forms favor short lines and large sizes where the angular curvature and tight apertures remain clear.