Sans Other Turah 6 is a light, normal width, monoline, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, branding, ui labels, posters, tech identity, minimal, futuristic, technical, clean, quirky, modernize, differentiate, systematic, simplify, geometric, rounded, open counters, high contrast joins, stencil-like.
A monoline sans with a geometric construction and generous rounding in bowls and curves. Many capitals lean on straight, simplified strokes with occasional breaks and capped terminals, creating a lightly stencil-like, modular feel. Curved letters (C, G, O, Q, S) are smooth and near-circular, while diagonals (A, V, W, X, Y) are crisp and linear. Lowercase forms are compact with a relatively low x-height, tall ascenders, and simple, single-storey structures; spacing reads even, with slightly idiosyncratic proportions across glyphs that add a constructed, custom-drawn rhythm.
Works well for display sizes such as headlines, logotypes, posters, and packaging where the constructed uppercase can provide a recognizable voice. The cleaner lowercase supports short passages, UI labels, navigation, and caption-like settings where a modern, technical tone is desired.
The overall tone is modern and technical, with a subtle experimental edge from the interrupted strokes and simplified letter logic. It feels sleek and minimal rather than friendly, suggesting contemporary UI/industrial contexts while still reading as distinctive and designed.
The design appears intended to blend a clean geometric sans foundation with distinctive, modular interruptions to create a contemporary, slightly futuristic signature without abandoning legibility.
Distinctive details include the slashed zero, a single-storey “a,” and a “t” with a short, offset crossbar, all reinforcing a utilitarian, systems-oriented character. The uppercase set appears more stylized than the lowercase, which remains comparatively straightforward for text use.