Sans Other Teba 11 is a very light, normal width, monoline, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: logotypes, posters, headlines, branding, packaging, futuristic, art deco, minimal, airy, elegant, distinctive display, modern minimalism, deco revival, geometric system, neon-like look, geometric, stylized, modular, open counters, high contrast gaps.
A stylized geometric sans with ultra-thin, even strokes and deliberate breaks where strokes would normally connect. Curves are built from near-circular arcs with open terminals, while straight stems are crisp and vertical, creating a clean modular rhythm. Many glyphs show split bowls and interrupted crossbars (notably in forms like E, F, G, O, S, and several numerals), producing a light, etched silhouette with generous internal space. Lowercase forms keep a simple, single-storey construction and the overall texture reads refined and high-clarity rather than dense.
Best suited to display applications where its cut-out construction can be appreciated—logotypes, editorial headlines, posters, fashion or tech branding, packaging, and title cards. It can work for short UI labels or navigation when set large enough, but extended body text is less ideal due to the intentionally broken strokes.
The repeated cut-ins and open joins give the typeface a contemporary, slightly sci‑fi personality with strong Art Deco undertones. It feels sleek and architectural—more like neon tubing or precision drafting than a conventional text sans—projecting a sense of modernity and sophistication.
The letterforms appear designed to reinterpret a neutral geometric sans through a system of strategic gaps and open terminals, emphasizing lightness, precision, and a distinctive modular signature. The intent reads as creating a memorable, modern display voice that remains clean and orderly while standing apart from standard continuous-stroke constructions.
The design relies on negative space as a defining feature, so readability is closely tied to size and contrast: the breaks become a signature detail at display sizes but can visually fragment at small sizes. Numerals echo the same interrupted, rounded construction, helping headings and UI-style labels feel cohesive.