Stencil Isba 14 is a bold, wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Artegra Sans' and 'Dexa Pro' by Artegra and 'Foundry Context' by The Foundry (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: posters, headlines, signage, packaging, branding, industrial, utilitarian, technical, assertive, modernist, stencil marking, industrial voice, graphic impact, systematic look, signage utility, geometric, blocky, hard-edged, high impact, monoline.
A heavy, geometric sans with monoline strokes and squared-off terminals, built from simple, strongly modular shapes. The design uses consistent stencil breaks—most visibly as vertical cut-outs through counters and bowls—creating a crisp rhythm of solid mass and negative-space bridges. Curves are broad and mechanical, while straight stems and arms feel rigid and engineered; joins are clean and angular, and counters stay relatively open despite the dense weight. Proportions read slightly extended, with broad capitals and sturdy, compact lowercase forms that keep a steady, even texture in lines of text.
Best suited for display typography where the stencil construction can be read clearly: posters, headlines, packaging, and identity work that benefits from a rugged or technical voice. It also fits wayfinding, labels, and signage themes, especially when paired with minimalist layouts or high-contrast color blocking. For long passages, it will be most comfortable at larger text sizes due to the bold mass and internal cut-outs.
The overall tone is industrial and no-nonsense, evoking labeling, fabrication, and equipment markings. The repeated stencil interruptions add a tactical, coded feel that can read as technical, militaristic, or logistics-oriented depending on context. Its strong silhouettes and blunt geometry project confidence and a contemporary, utility-first attitude.
The design appears intended to deliver an industrial stencil aesthetic with strong legibility and a repeatable, geometric construction. By combining broad proportions with consistent internal breaks, it aims to feel engineered and contemporary while providing a distinctive, high-impact texture in short phrases and titles.
The stencil bridges are integrated as a defining motif rather than incidental wear, producing a deliberate, systematized pattern across letters and numerals. At smaller sizes the internal breaks can become visually active, while at larger sizes they turn into a distinctive graphic detail suitable for display settings.