Serif Other Ukri 4 is a very bold, narrow, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, sports branding, packaging, logos, sporty, retro, assertive, dynamic, industrial, impact, condensation, motion, display, ruggedness, condensed, slanted, wedge serif, ink-trap, angular.
A condensed, right-slanted serif with heavy, compact strokes and crisp, angular terminals. Serifs are small and wedge-like, often expressed as sharp flares rather than long brackets, giving the letters a chiseled, engineered feel. Curves are tightened into squared bowls and rounded-rectangle counters (notably in O/0 and b/p), with occasional notch-like cut-ins that read like ink traps at joins. The rhythm is punchy and forward-leaning, with tall ascenders/descenders and tightly controlled interior space that keeps the texture dense at display sizes.
Best used for short, high-impact text such as headlines, event posters, sports or team branding, labels, and logo lockups where the condensed width helps fit more characters without losing presence. It can work for subheads and callouts, but the dense texture and sharp detailing are most effective at medium-to-large sizes.
The overall tone is energetic and forceful, blending a vintage athletic/poster attitude with a utilitarian, machined edge. Its slant and sharp detailing add motion and urgency, making it feel suited to competitive, action-oriented messaging rather than quiet reading.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum punch in a compact footprint, combining classic serif cues with aggressive, streamlined shapes. The tightened counters, wedge-like serifs, and slanted stance suggest a focus on speed, strength, and attention-grabbing display performance.
Figures are tall and compact, matching the condensed caps; the 0 is an oval/rounded-rectangle that stays visually distinct from the 8 and 9 through counter shapes and tight apertures. Lowercase forms keep the same angular logic, with single-storey a and strong, squared shoulders that maintain a consistent, rugged texture across mixed-case settings.