Sans Other Uhdu 2 is a very light, normal width, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, ui labels, tech branding, motion graphics, futuristic, technical, schematic, minimal, glitchy, interface aesthetic, sci-fi styling, experimental legibility, modular construction, display impact, monoline, segmented, angular, geometric, wireframe.
A sharply slanted, monoline sans built from thin, segmented strokes with frequent breaks and open joins. The letterforms are predominantly angular and geometric, favoring straight horizontals and diagonals over curves, which gives many glyphs a constructed, schematic feel. Terminals are blunt and abbreviated, counters are often implied rather than fully enclosed, and spacing feels airy due to the fine stroke and discontinuous contours. Overall rhythm is consistent and modular, with a strong forward-leaning posture and a deliberately fragmented outline logic.
Best suited to display settings such as headlines, posters, titles, and short UI-style labels where its segmented construction can read crisply. It’s a strong fit for technology branding, sci‑fi themed graphics, motion work, and interface-inspired layouts, but less appropriate for long-form text where the open forms and breaks may slow reading.
The font reads as futuristic and technical, evoking instrument labeling, sci‑fi interfaces, and schematic diagrams. Its broken strokes and sparse connections add a subtle glitch or decrypted-code tone while staying clean and controlled rather than distressed.
The design appears intended to reinterpret a clean italic sans through a modular, cut-line construction—prioritizing a high-tech, interface-like voice and visual novelty over conventional text readability.
Because many shapes rely on partial contours, legibility can become sensitive to size and reproduction conditions; the design works best when the thin strokes and gaps remain clearly resolved. The numeral set follows the same segmented construction, maintaining the techno-system aesthetic across alphanumerics.