Sans Other Mylip 13 is a very bold, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, logotypes, packaging, sports branding, industrial, retro, stencil-like, heavy, assertive, high impact, industrial marking, retro display, graphic branding, blocky, squared, rounded corners, compact, notched.
A very heavy, block-built sans with squared proportions and softened, rounded outer corners. Counters are tight and often rendered as narrow vertical slits, creating a compressed internal rhythm and strong ink-trap-like notches at joins and terminals. Curves are minimal and simplified into chunky geometry; bowls and shoulders read as rectilinear forms with occasional chamfered or clipped corners. Overall spacing feels compact and dense, with a rugged, engineered consistency that keeps the texture dark and uniform in text.
Best suited to large-scale display use such as posters, headlines, event graphics, and punchy branding where the dense black texture is an asset. It can work well on packaging or labels that want an industrial or retro-technical feel, and in short bursts of text where the notched construction reads as a deliberate stylistic cue.
The tone is bold and workmanlike, evoking industrial labeling, machinery markings, and retro display graphics. Its chunky geometry and slit counters give it a tough, utilitarian character with a slight sci‑fi/arcade edge. The overall impression is loud, confident, and intentionally mechanical rather than friendly or refined.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum impact with a compact, engineered silhouette, using slit counters and notched joins to keep forms recognizable while preserving a solid, poster-ready color. It prioritizes graphic presence and a mechanical vibe over neutral legibility, aiming for distinctive, stamp-like display typography.
Several letters rely on distinctive cut-ins and narrow apertures for differentiation, which adds character but can reduce clarity at smaller sizes. The lowercase appears sturdy and close in color to the uppercase, helping maintain a consistent, heavy texture across mixed-case settings.