Sans Other Tihi 14 is a light, very narrow, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logotypes, sci‑fi ui, packaging, techno, retro, futuristic, minimal, mechanical, tech display, space saving, digital feel, systemic geometry, angular, condensed, geometric, wireframe, squared.
A sharply rectilinear sans with a tall, condensed stance and consistent single-stroke construction. Forms are built from straight verticals and horizontals with squared counters and frequent open apertures; curves are largely replaced by faceted corners and clipped diagonals. Capitals and figures emphasize narrow proportions and high internal contrast between tight counters and generous sidebearings, while lowercase keeps a similarly linear, architectural rhythm. Diacritics and punctuation appear simplified, reinforcing a clean, schematic texture in text.
Best suited to display contexts where its tall, angular construction can read as intentional: posters, title cards, game/sci‑fi interface graphics, logotypes, and compact labeling. It can also work for short UI labels or technical callouts where a schematic, engineered look is desired, but it may feel too spare for extended body text.
The overall tone reads technical and futuristic, with a retro digital flavor reminiscent of schematics, terminals, and sci‑fi titling. Its thin, angular outlines feel precise and engineered rather than friendly or organic, giving compositions a crisp, slightly austere energy.
This font appears designed to translate a geometric, blueprint-like sans into a tightly condensed system with consistent stroke logic and minimal curvature. The emphasis on squared counters, open structures, and crisp corners suggests an aim for a distinctive techno display voice while maintaining enough regularity for practical setting in short blocks.
The design’s open shapes (notably in several capitals and the ‘squared’ bowls) help maintain clarity at display sizes, while the extreme narrowness and simplified joins can create a sparse, ladder-like rhythm in long lines. Numerals share the same boxy logic, supporting a cohesive system for codes, labels, and UI-like typography.