Sans Other Urpe 14 is a very light, wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: display, branding, ui labels, tech packaging, posters, futuristic, minimal, technical, airy, geometric, futurist styling, minimal clarity, geometric construction, tech signaling, rounded corners, open forms, extended caps, high contrast spacing, crisp terminals.
A sparse monoline sans with generous horizontal proportions and a notably open, constructed feel. Strokes are uniformly thin with rounded-corner joins and smooth curves that stay close to circular geometry in bowls and counters. Several letters use simplified, open structures (notably in forms like G, S, and e), and verticals often read as straight, clean pillars with minimal modulation. The overall rhythm is spacious, with wide letterforms and ample internal counters that keep the texture light and uncluttered.
Best suited to display settings where its thin strokes and wide spacing can breathe—headlines, logotypes, product names, and short UI/wayfinding labels. It works particularly well in technology, electronics, and futuristic-themed branding, and in clean editorial layouts where a light, modern voice is desired.
The tone is sleek and contemporary, leaning toward a sci‑fi and tech-forward aesthetic. Its pared-back construction and open apertures create an airy, schematic voice that feels modern, calm, and slightly experimental rather than traditional.
The design appears intended to deliver a minimalist, geometric sans with a futuristic edge by using monoline construction, rounded corners, and selectively open forms. The goal seems to be a distinctive, lightweight texture that stays legible in short strings while signaling a technical, contemporary identity.
Distinctive constructed details—such as partial strokes and open terminals—give the alphabet a stylized, engineered character while maintaining clear baseline alignment and consistent stroke logic. The numerals follow the same minimal geometry, with simplified curves and clean, straight segments that match the letterforms’ crispness.