Sans Other Remar 6 is a bold, very narrow, medium contrast, upright, tall x-height font visually similar to 'Shtozer' by Pepper Type (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: posters, headlines, signage, branding, packaging, industrial, art deco, condensed, geometric, mechanical, compact impact, modernist display, signage utility, geometric system, rectilinear, angular, modular, vertical, monolinear.
A tightly condensed, rectilinear sans with strong vertical stress and a largely uniform stroke. Curves are minimized into squared counters and flattened bowls, producing a modular, constructed feel across both cases and figures. Terminals are mostly blunt and straight-cut, with occasional angled joins in letters like K, V, W, X, and Y that add crisp, engineered diagonals. The lowercase closely echoes the uppercase structure, with compact apertures and a narrow rhythm that stays highly consistent through text.
Best suited to display settings where a compact, high-impact voice is needed—posters, headlines, logos, labels, and wayfinding. Its compressed width helps fit long titles into tight spaces while maintaining a strong vertical presence; in smaller sizes, the tight apertures suggest using generous spacing and sufficient size for clarity.
The overall tone is mechanical and architectural, evoking signage, machinery plates, and early-modern display lettering. Its tall, compressed silhouette reads assertive and purposeful, with an Art Deco–leaning sense of streamlined geometry rather than softness or warmth.
The design appears intended as a space-efficient display sans with a constructed, geometric identity, prioritizing verticality, repetition, and a disciplined grid-like rhythm for striking titling and sign-style applications.
Figures and capitals share the same squared, constructed language, giving mixed alphanumerics a cohesive, system-like appearance. The design’s narrow internal spaces and squared counters emphasize pattern and texture, especially in long runs of text.