Sans Other Tehi 10 is a light, normal width, low contrast, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, logotypes, packaging, modernist, architectural, minimal, technical, stylized, distinctive texture, geometric clarity, modern branding, technical voice, monolinear, geometric, high-waisted, open apertures, crisp.
A stylized sans with monolinear strokes and a geometric backbone, marked by intentional stencil-like interruptions and cut-ins throughout the uppercase and lowercase. Many round forms are drawn as near-circular bowls with small gaps or flattened joins, while verticals and diagonals stay straight and crisp. Proportions feel clean and slightly narrow in the caps, paired with a tall, simple lowercase that keeps counters open and shapes uncluttered. Numerals follow the same pared-back construction, with circular forms echoing the letter bowls and consistent stroke behavior across the set.
Best suited to headlines, branding, and short-to-medium display copy where the segmented forms can be appreciated. It can work well for logos, packaging, and editorial titles that benefit from a clean geometric voice with a distinctive signature. For long-form reading, the recurring breaks may draw attention and are likely more effective when used deliberately for emphasis.
The overall tone is modern and architectural, with a precise, engineered feel. The recurring breaks and segmented strokes add a distinctive, slightly futuristic character that reads as designed rather than neutral. It balances clarity with an intentional graphic quirk that makes it feel contemporary and display-forward.
The design appears intended to reinterpret a straightforward geometric sans by introducing controlled interruptions and simplified joins, creating a recognizable texture without adding ornament. It aims for a contemporary, technical look that stays legible while projecting a crafted, graphic identity.
The repeated internal breaks create strong rhythm in words, producing a patterned texture at text sizes and a more pronounced “stencil” signal at larger sizes. Round letters and numerals share a consistent circular logic, helping headlines feel cohesive even with the atypical constructions.