Sans Other Islem 3 is a bold, narrow, monoline, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, children’s, branding, playful, quirky, handmade, friendly, retro, add personality, friendly display, handmade feel, compact impact, retro flavor, rounded terminals, soft corners, cartoonish, bouncy, informal.
A compact sans with monoline strokes and softened, slightly irregular curves that give the letters a hand-drawn feel. Forms are generally narrow with tight interior counters, and many glyphs show subtle waviness or asymmetry rather than strict geometric precision. Terminals are rounded or gently blunted, and bowls (like in B, P, R, and a) read as squarish-oval with a steady stroke width. The lowercase is simple and sturdy, with a single-storey a and g and a relatively small x-height feel compared to the tall ascenders and uppercase height.
Best suited to short-to-medium display settings where its personality can be appreciated: posters, headlines, packaging, casual branding, and kids-oriented or playful editorial callouts. It can also work for UI labels or small blocks when set with generous spacing, but it visually performs strongest when allowed a bit of size.
The overall tone is casual and characterful, leaning playful rather than corporate. Its slightly wonky rhythm and softened shapes evoke a friendly, crafty sensibility with a touch of retro cartoon signage. It reads as approachable and expressive, prioritizing personality over neutrality.
The design appears intended as a lively, approachable display sans that mimics hand-rendered lettering while staying clean and consistent enough for repeated use. Its narrow, bold presence and softened terminals suggest a focus on compact impact and a friendly voice for contemporary or retro-leaning graphics.
In text, the vertical emphasis and compact widths create a dense, rhythmic texture, while the irregularities keep the line lively. Numerals follow the same softened, narrow construction; curved figures (0, 3, 8, 9) keep rounded corners, while angled forms (4, 7) stay bold and simple. The uppercase and lowercase share consistent stroke behavior, supporting mixed-case settings without feeling like separate designs.