Sans Other Remah 7 is a very bold, very narrow, low contrast, upright, tall x-height font visually similar to 'FF Softsoul' by FontFont and 'MC Cranax', 'MC Cyberyzz', 'MC Groghrz', 'MC Morlix', 'MC Sheross', 'MC Starroz', 'MC Wavety', and 'MC Xarztic' by Maulana Creative (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, logotypes, packaging, signage, industrial, condensed, retro, authoritative, utilitarian, space saving, high impact, industrial voice, retro display, geometric, rectilinear, squared counters, tight spacing, vertical stress.
A tall, tightly compressed sans with monolinear, heavy strokes and a strongly vertical rhythm. Forms are built from rectilinear geometry with squared corners, narrow apertures, and small, boxy counters; curves are minimal and tend to resolve into straight-sided bowls and U-shaped turns. Terminals are blunt and uniform, giving the letters a stamped, engineered feel, while the overall texture reads dark and continuous due to the compact proportions and tight internal spaces.
Best suited to display sizes where its condensed, dark texture can create strong impact—posters, bold branding, packaging panels, and short headline lines. It also fits utilitarian contexts like labels or signage where a strict, engineered voice is desirable and space is limited.
The font projects an industrial, institutional tone—firm, no-nonsense, and slightly retro. Its compact vertical emphasis and squared construction evoke signage, labeling, and machinery aesthetics, with a confident, authoritative presence in headlines.
Likely designed to maximize visual impact in narrow widths, using rectilinear construction and uniform stroke weight to deliver a compact, high-density texture. The consistent, squared detailing suggests an intent to reference industrial and retro display lettering while keeping the system simple and repeatable across characters.
The uppercase set appears particularly rigid and architectural, while the lowercase keeps the same compressed logic and maintains clarity through simplified shapes. Numerals follow the same narrow, block-built approach, producing a consistent, highly structured look across alphanumerics.