Sans Other Rybis 2 is a regular weight, very narrow, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, logotypes, packaging, signage, art deco, retro, mechanical, architectural, dramatic, deco revival, display impact, geometric styling, signage utility, brand voice, condensed, monolinear feel, angular, rectilinear, geometric.
A tall, tightly drawn sans with rectilinear construction and a strong vertical rhythm. Strokes are mostly straight with crisp 90° turns and occasional diagonal cuts, creating a chiseled, modular feel. Counters are narrow and rectangular, and terminals tend to be blunt or sharply notched rather than rounded. Uppercase forms are particularly columnar, while lowercase maintains a compact, linear structure with minimal curvature and a clear, engineered pattern across the set.
Best suited to display settings where its tall geometry and stylized details can read clearly—posters, titles, logotypes, and packaging. It can also work for short signage or UI labels when used at larger sizes with generous tracking, but its narrow counters and sharp joins make it less ideal for long-form copy.
The overall tone is distinctly Art Deco and machine-age: sleek, stylized, and intentionally dramatic. Its rigid geometry and narrow apertures suggest signage, architecture, and industrial labeling more than conversational text. The sharp corners and high tension in the shapes give it a confident, slightly severe voice.
The design appears intended to evoke a streamlined, architectural sans with Art Deco flavor, prioritizing verticality, geometric consistency, and striking silhouette over neutrality. Its distinctive notches and rectilinear counters suggest a goal of creating a memorable, period-inflected display face for modern branding and titling.
Several glyphs use unconventional joins and cut-ins (notched or inset strokes) that heighten the decorative, display-oriented character. Spacing appears tuned for tall headlines, with a consistent vertical emphasis and a rhythmic alternation of thick stems and fine connector strokes that becomes more pronounced at larger sizes.