Sans Other Urmy 9 is a very light, normal width, monoline, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, packaging, short quotes, airy, futuristic, playful, minimal, quirky, modernity, distinctiveness, lightness, approachability, display focus, rounded, geometric, open apertures, soft corners, high contrast (shape).
A delicate, monoline sans with a consistent forward slant and generous curvature throughout. Strokes are thin and clean, with rounded terminals and simplified, geometric construction that favors arcs and open forms over tight joins. Several capitals lean toward single-stroke or reduced-detail builds, while the lowercase keeps a smooth, spacious rhythm with wide bowls and open apertures. Numerals follow the same light, rounded logic, producing an overall look that feels intentionally spare and slightly unconventional in its letterfit and proportions.
Best suited to display sizes where its thin strokes and distinctive constructions can be appreciated—such as headlines, posters, branding marks, packaging, and short editorial pull quotes. It can also work for UI accents or section headers when used with ample size and contrast against the background.
The tone is light and airy, with a soft, futuristic personality that reads as friendly rather than technical. Its simplified forms and gentle rounding introduce a playful, modernist quirk that can feel experimental and stylized without becoming aggressive or noisy.
The design appears intended to deliver a sleek, contemporary sans with an experimental edge, prioritizing elegance and visual novelty through reduced strokes, rounded geometry, and a consistent italicized flow. It aims to create a memorable word shape and a modern, airy texture rather than a conventional neutral sans voice.
The sample text shows a distinctive texture created by the combination of thin strokes, slanted posture, and open counters; this gives words a flowing, ribbon-like line while keeping individual letters clearly separated. Some glyphs exhibit intentionally atypical construction (especially in capitals), reinforcing a designed, display-oriented character rather than a strictly utilitarian one.