Sans Other Loris 5 is a regular weight, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: logotypes, posters, headlines, branding, packaging, playful, futuristic, techy, quirky, geometric, distinctive branding, geometric clarity, decorative texture, futuristic accent, playful signage, rounded, stencil-like, high contrast counters, punctuated dots, display.
A geometric sans with monoline strokes and a clean, upright stance, distinguished by frequent interior cut-ins and punctuated details. Many bowls and counters are treated as near-circular forms, often with small circular “eyes” or dots placed inside (notably in O/o, Q/q, 8/9-like shapes, and other rounded letters), giving the face a marked iconographic rhythm. Several characters feature deliberate breaks or notches—such as the E’s mid-arm gap, segmented terminals, and squared-off joins—creating a subtle stencil-like construction while keeping edges mostly smooth and rounded. Proportions skew toward simple, legible silhouettes with open apertures, and numerals follow the same geometric logic with circular counters and flat, even stroke endings.
Best suited to display contexts where its dotted counters and segmented construction can be appreciated—logos, titles, posters, packaging, and short brand phrases. It can work for interface or tech-themed graphics as a distinctive accent face, but its decorative interior details make it less ideal for long-form reading at smaller sizes.
The overall tone is playful and slightly futuristic, mixing friendly roundness with engineered cutouts and “robotic” dot accents. The repeated eye-like counters lend a characterful, toy-tech personality that reads as modern, quirky, and attention-grabbing rather than neutral.
The font appears designed to reimagine a straightforward geometric sans through systematic interior dots and controlled cutouts, creating a recognizable signature without abandoning clear letterforms. The intent reads as a contemporary, brand-ready display sans that balances friendliness with a lightly industrial, futuristic edge.
The design’s personality is driven by consistent internal punctuation and occasional segmented strokes; these features become more prominent at larger sizes where the small interior dots and cut-ins are clearly visible. In text settings, the dotted counters create a distinctive texture and can feel decorative, especially across lines with many rounded letters.