Sans Other Tipy 4 is a light, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: display, ui labels, signage, posters, headlines, tech, retro, futuristic, geometric, utilitarian, sci‑fi tone, technical labeling, systematic construction, distinctive display, square, angular, modular, linear, precision.
A geometric, line-built sans with squared bowls and crisp 45° chamfers at key joins. Strokes remain consistent and straight, favoring open rectangular counters and hard corners over curves. Proportions feel engineered: many glyphs are constructed from verticals, horizontals, and diagonals, with a boxy rhythm and slightly condensed internal spacing. The lowercase mirrors the uppercase’s rectilinear logic, keeping forms simple and schematic, while figures follow the same angular, segmented construction for a cohesive set.
Best suited to display sizes where its angular details and chamfered joins stay crisp—such as interface headers, dashboard labels, wayfinding, packaging, and sci‑fi or tech-themed posters. It can work for short passages in supportive text (captions or callouts) when ample tracking and leading are provided, but the squared counters and tight geometry make it more impactful than relaxed for long reading.
The overall tone reads technical and retro-futurist, like labeling on instruments, terminals, or sci‑fi interfaces. Its strict geometry and clipped corners give it a precise, machine-made voice that feels modernist and slightly arcade-like rather than friendly or humanist.
The design appears intended to deliver a constructed, system-like sans that prioritizes consistency and a technical silhouette. By reducing curves to straight segments and chamfers, it aims for a futuristic, engineered look that remains highly legible and visually distinctive in headings and labeling contexts.
Diagonal strokes are used sparingly and purposefully (notably in K, M, N, V, W, X, Y, and the slashed zero), reinforcing a modular, constructed aesthetic. The design relies on corners and chamfers to suggest curvature, which creates a distinctive pixel-adjacent flavor while remaining clean and not grid-snapped.