Sans Other Uhma 8 is a regular weight, very narrow, monoline, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, packaging, tech ui, technical, futuristic, efficient, mechanical, precise, space-saving, modernist, sci-fi, industrial, display impact, condensed, angular, squared, rectilinear, sharp-cornered.
A sharply condensed, right-leaning sans with a rectilinear construction and uniform stroke weight. Curves are minimized into squared corners and short, angled joins, giving counters a boxy, engineered feel. Terminals tend to be clean and clipped, and many forms use straight-sided bowls or open apertures rather than fully rounded shapes. The overall rhythm is tight and vertical, with compact widths and consistent, disciplined spacing in the sample text.
Best suited to display roles where a compact, high-impact voice is needed—headlines, posters, branding marks, product labels, and tech-leaning UI or HUD-style graphics. Its condensed width helps fit long words into tight spaces while maintaining a bold, engineered presence. For body copy, it will be most comfortable at larger sizes where the angular details and tight fit remain clear.
The tone reads as technical and forward-looking, with a utilitarian, machine-made crispness. Its narrow, angular forms evoke instrumentation, sci‑fi interfaces, and engineered branding rather than casual or literary settings. The slanted stance adds motion and urgency without becoming expressive or calligraphic.
The design appears intended to deliver a sleek, space-saving sans with a constructed, geometric personality—prioritizing crisp outlines, compact widths, and a sense of speed. It aims to communicate modernity and precision through squared counters, clipped terminals, and a consistent, monoline drawing approach.
Distinctive, squared-off construction is especially noticeable in rounded letters and numerals, which are drawn as angular loops with flattened turns. The narrow proportions and clipped corners create a high-contrast texture on the line, making it visually striking but inherently less relaxed for extended reading.