Sans Other Tevo 1 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'FF Infra' by FontFont, 'Urania' by Hoftype, 'Jam Grotesque' by JAM Type Design, and 'Tenorite' by Microsoft Corporation (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: branding, headlines, posters, logotypes, ui titles, techy, futuristic, digital, minimal, distinctive motif, tech aesthetic, display clarity, systematic design, stencil breaks, segmented, geometric, monoline, modular.
A geometric sans with monoline strokes and consistent, engineered construction. Many letters feature deliberate mid‑stroke interruptions and small notches that read like stencil bridges or segmented display cuts, giving counters and bowls a sliced, modular feel. Curves are clean and near-circular in O/C/G, while straight strokes remain crisp with squared terminals and occasional angled joins. Proportions are balanced and fairly even across caps and lowercase, with simple, single-storey forms in the lowercase and a tidy, uncluttered rhythm in text.
Well-suited for branding, titles, and poster typography where the segmented motif can function as a signature element. It can also work for UI or product naming at larger sizes, especially in technology, gaming, or futuristic themes, where the crisp geometry and engineered cuts reinforce the message.
The segmented detailing lends a distinctly digital, technical tone—clinical and futuristic rather than friendly or handwritten. It suggests engineered systems, interfaces, or sci‑fi branding, with an intentional “constructed” personality that stands out in headlines and short phrases.
The design appears intended to fuse a clean geometric sans foundation with a stencil/segment concept, creating recognizability through consistent mid-stroke breaks. The goal is likely a contemporary, tech-forward voice that feels precise and constructed while remaining broadly legible at display sizes.
The repeated cross-stroke breaks become a strong identifying motif across both letters and numerals, creating a cohesive system-like texture. In continuous reading, the cuts add visual sparkle and a slightly mechanical cadence, making the design feel more like a display sans than a neutral workhorse.