Sans Other Ilso 6 is a very bold, wide, high contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: sports branding, racing graphics, game ui, sci-fi titles, posters, futuristic, racing, aggressive, technical, sporty, imply speed, add impact, look technical, feel modern, angular, oblique, squared, condensed counters, corner-cut.
A sharply slanted, geometric sans with heavy, clean strokes and a distinctly angular construction. Letterforms are built from straight segments with squared curves and corner-cut terminals, producing faceted counters (notably in O, C, D, and 0) and crisp interior angles. The rhythm is forward-leaning and dynamic, with compact apertures and tight interior space in many glyphs, while maintaining consistent stroke logic across caps, lowercase, and figures. Diagonals are prominent and mechanically precise, and several characters use stylized joins and notches that emphasize speed and directionality.
Best suited to headlines, logotypes, and short bursts of text where momentum and edge are desirable—sports identities, racing-themed graphics, esports or gaming interfaces, and tech or sci‑fi promotional materials. It can work for subheads and UI labels when set generously, but its strongest performance is in display sizes.
The overall tone is fast, assertive, and tech-forward, evoking motorsport graphics, sci‑fi interfaces, and high-energy branding. Its hard edges and forward slant convey motion and intensity, with a purposeful, engineered feel rather than a friendly or neutral voice.
The font appears designed to deliver a high-impact, speed-oriented look by combining an oblique stance with angular, corner-cut geometry and tightly controlled counters. Its consistent, modular construction suggests an intention to feel engineered and modern, with stylization that prioritizes character and motion cues.
The design favors display impact over calm readability: narrow openings and squared counters can merge at smaller sizes, while the distinctive glyph shaping remains highly recognizable at large scale. Numerals follow the same angular logic, with a particularly stylized 0 featuring an internal diagonal cut, reinforcing a technical, instrument-like aesthetic.