Pixel Dash Abto 9 is a regular weight, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, branding, tech ui, album art, digital, glitchy, industrial, technical, kinetic, scanline effect, digital texture, brand signature, display impact, motion feel, striped, stenciled, segmented, modular, high-impact.
A bold, geometric sans with letterforms built from stacked horizontal bars, creating a consistently segmented, striped texture across the set. Strokes are broken into short dashes with small gaps that read like scanlines, while overall silhouettes remain clean and modern with mostly squared terminals and occasional rounded bowls. Curves (like C, G, O, S) are smoothly constructed but visibly quantized by the striping, and diagonals (A, K, V, W, X, Y) maintain crisp angles despite the interruptions. The repeated banding produces an even color rhythm in text, with counters and apertures staying open enough to preserve recognizable shapes at display sizes.
Best suited to display applications where the scanline texture can be appreciated: posters, headlines, packaging accents, event graphics, and tech-leaning branding. It can also work for UI labels or on-screen titles when set at sizes large enough to keep the segmented strokes distinct.
The striped construction evokes screen interference, motion, and data-like patterning, giving the font a distinctly digital and slightly disruptive tone. It feels engineered and contemporary, balancing legibility with a deliberate “signal break” aesthetic that adds energy and attitude.
The design appears intended to fuse a straightforward geometric sans structure with a deliberate horizontal dash pattern, producing a glitch/scanline signature while retaining clear letter silhouettes. The consistent striping suggests a focus on visual identity and rhythmic texture rather than neutral body-text performance.
The segmentation is horizontal and uniform, which creates strong line-to-line texture and a sense of horizontal flow across words. In longer passages, the scanline effect becomes a defining texture, so spacing and size will strongly influence readability—especially where small gaps begin to merge visually.