Sans Other Unte 2 is a regular weight, narrow, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, logos, packaging, signage, retro, industrial, display, techy, stencil-like, distinctiveness, branding, retro-tech, texture, display impact, rounded corners, notched strokes, segmented, compressed, high contrast gaps.
A condensed monoline sans with rounded terminals and a distinctive segmented construction. Many strokes include consistent horizontal breaks or notches that read like inlined bands, creating a stencil/scanline effect across bowls, stems, and crossbars. Curves are simplified and geometric, counters stay fairly open, and spacing feels compact with a steady vertical rhythm. The design maintains a uniform stroke weight while using the recurring cutouts to add texture and prevent large dark areas.
Best suited for short, high-impact settings such as posters, titles, brand marks, packaging, and signage where the segmented detail can be appreciated. It can also work for themed UI/graphics or event materials that want a technical or retro-industrial flavor, but the internal breaks make it less ideal for long-form reading at small sizes.
The repeated notches give the face a retro-futurist, industrial tone—suggesting labeling, machinery, or electronic display aesthetics rather than neutral text setting. It feels playful but controlled, with a purposeful “engineered” quirk that adds character without becoming chaotic.
Likely intended as a characterful display sans that reinterprets a condensed grotesque structure through systematic inline cutouts. The design prioritizes a recognizable silhouette and a consistent decorative motif, enabling strong branding and a distinctive voice across caps, lowercase, and numerals.
The segmented inlines are prominent at both headline sizes and in running sample text, where they create a vibrating horizontal cadence. Numerals and uppercase maintain the same system of breaks, helping the alphabet feel like a cohesive, branded set rather than a conventional utilitarian sans.