Sans Other Ohre 6 is a bold, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, logotypes, game ui, album art, edgy, playful, hand-cut, quirky, aggressive, impact, character, roughness, novelty, energy, angular, jagged, blocky, choppy, irregular.
A heavy, angular display sans with sharply clipped corners and chiseled, wedge-like terminals. Strokes are predominantly uniform in thickness, but contours are intentionally irregular, creating a hand-cut, slightly warped silhouette from letter to letter. Counters are tight and often squared-off, with compact apertures and abrupt joins that emphasize a dense, poster-like texture. Proportions vary across glyphs, and the overall rhythm is lively and uneven, with a spiky, faceted geometry that remains consistently bold in color.
Best suited to short text where texture and attitude matter: posters, punchy headlines, branding wordmarks, title cards, and game or event graphics. It can work for short captions at larger sizes, but the tight counters and jagged detailing make it less comfortable for sustained reading at small sizes.
The font conveys a loud, mischievous energy—part street-poster toughness, part cartoon menace. Its jagged construction feels improvised and kinetic, suggesting something rebellious, playful, and slightly chaotic rather than refined or neutral.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum impact through a compact, high-ink silhouette and deliberately irregular, cutout-like shaping. It prioritizes character and motion over strict geometric consistency, aiming for a distinctive, gritty display voice.
Diagonal forms (notably in K, V, W, X, Y) read as chunky, cut-paper wedges, while verticals often end in squared nicks that look carved rather than drawn. Numerals follow the same blocky, notched logic, keeping the set visually cohesive in headline settings.