Sans Other Uhly 6 is a regular weight, very narrow, high contrast, italic, tall x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, sports branding, product branding, tech ui accents, dynamic, technical, sporty, retro-futurist, urgent, space saving, convey motion, display impact, tech styling, branding edge, condensed, angular, oblique, sharp, monolinear feel.
A sharply slanted, tightly condensed sans with tall proportions and a strongly directional rhythm. Strokes appear crisp and mostly straight, with angular joins and occasional faceted curves that keep counters narrow and vertical. The overall construction favors speed and tension: terminals are clean and abrupt, diagonals are prominent, and spacing is compact, producing a dense, forward-leaning texture in text. Uppercase and lowercase share a consistent, engineered geometry, while numerals follow the same compressed, aerodynamic logic for a unified set.
Best suited to short, high-impact settings such as headlines, posters, packaging callouts, team or event branding, and tech-themed graphics. It can also work for UI labels or overlays when space is limited and a sense of motion is desirable; for longer editorial reading, it’s more effective as an accent than a primary text face.
The tone is fast, assertive, and slightly futuristic. Its narrow, oblique stance reads as kinetic and performance-driven, evoking motorsport graphics, tech interfaces, and late-modern display typography where urgency and motion are part of the message.
The design appears intended to deliver a space-saving, high-energy sans voice with a sleek, aerodynamic profile. Its condensed proportions, strong slant, and angular detailing prioritize immediacy and visual momentum, aiming for a modern display look that stays consistent across capitals, lowercase, and figures.
At larger sizes the sharp corners and narrow apertures create a distinctive silhouette and strong word shapes, while the condensed fit can make long passages feel intense and tightly packed. The pronounced slant and compact sidebearings emphasize momentum over calm readability, especially in multi-line settings.