Sans Other Tiry 12 is a light, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui labels, tech branding, posters, headlines, signage, techno, futuristic, geometric, minimal, modular, geometric system, digital feel, industrial tone, constructed forms, square, monoline, notched, angular, engineered.
This typeface is a geometric, monoline sans with a strongly rectilinear construction and squared curves. Strokes maintain an even thickness and form many glyphs from straight segments with crisp 90° joins, producing a modular, grid-like rhythm. Counters tend to be boxy and open, with frequent notches and cut-ins at joins (especially visible in curved letters rendered as squared arcs). The overall spacing feels measured and slightly mechanical, and the figures share the same angular logic, with simple, segmented forms.
It works well for interface labels, control-panel styling, tech-oriented branding, and headline or poster typography where the geometric voice can carry the design. In wayfinding or product markings, the squared forms can reinforce an industrial, systematic aesthetic.
The design reads as technical and futuristic, evoking digital interfaces, industrial labeling, and schematic signage. Its squared geometry and deliberate cut-ins give it a constructed, engineered tone rather than a humanist one, lending a cool, precise personality.
The font appears intended to reinterpret a sans structure through a modular, right-angled system, emphasizing clarity and a contemporary, digital-industrial feel. The notched joins and squared curves suggest a deliberate effort to make familiar letterforms feel more technical and constructed.
The caps and lowercase share a consistent squared-arc vocabulary, and the punctuation and dots appear clean and minimal. Diagonal strokes (as in V/W/X and parts of K/Y) are sharp and confident, helping the font keep energy despite its rigid geometry.