Sans Other Ubho 6 is a regular weight, normal width, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, magazine, book covers, branding, posters, editorial, formal, refined, authoritative, classic, editorial voice, premium branding, high contrast, display clarity, classic tone, crisp, sculpted, bracketed, flared, calligraphic.
This typeface has a sharply sculpted, high-contrast construction with a strong vertical axis and crisp tapering details. Strokes transition from thick stems to very thin hairlines, and many terminals end in subtle flares that read as serif-like even within an overall clean, streamlined silhouette. Proportions are traditional and steady, with modest x-height, generous capitals, and slightly narrow internal counters that create a dark, confident texture in paragraphs. Curves (O, C, S, 0) are smooth and controlled, while diagonals (V, W, X, Y) are clean and emphatic, contributing to a dignified rhythm.
It is well suited to headlines, magazine or journal typography, book covers, and brand identities that want a formal, high-end voice. It can work for short passages and pull quotes where its contrast can breathe, and it excels in larger sizes for titles and display settings.
The overall tone is polished and editorial, projecting seriousness and authority. Its contrast and tapered finishes add a refined, slightly classical flavor, lending an upmarket, publication-ready feel rather than a casual or utilitarian one.
The design appears intended to deliver a contemporary, streamlined take on high-contrast letterforms: clean and upright, but with tapered finishing and classical proportions that add sophistication. The goal seems to be an editorial display face that reads as premium and confident while remaining structurally straightforward.
The figures follow the same contrast logic as the letters, with distinctive shapes that stand out well at display sizes. In the sample text, the pronounced thick–thin pattern produces strong word shapes and clear emphasis, though the delicate hairlines suggest it benefits from adequate size and print-like rendering conditions.