Sans Other Lemif 3 is a bold, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Plantago' by Schriftlabor (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, logos, stickers, playful, quirky, hand-cut, retro, expressiveness, novelty, signage, impact, angular, irregular, compact, blocky, jaunty.
A chunky, sans-based display design with uneven, hand-cut geometry and slightly inconsistent widths from glyph to glyph. Strokes are heavy and largely monoline, with angular joins, flattened curves, and occasional wedge-like terminals that make counters feel pinched and faceted rather than smooth. The overall silhouette is compact and tall, with sturdy verticals and subtly off-kilter shapes that give the alphabet a lively, imperfect rhythm. Numerals follow the same cut-paper logic, pairing broad bodies with sharp corners and simplified interior spaces.
Best suited to display settings where its animated texture can carry the message: posters, headlines, packaging, label work, and logo/wordmark experiments. It can also work for short callouts or playful UI accents, but longer passages will look intentionally busy due to its irregular rhythm and dense silhouettes.
The font projects a playful, mischievous tone—more craft and character than precision. Its quirky irregularities read as informal and energetic, evoking DIY signage, vintage novelty lettering, and offbeat editorial headlines.
This design appears intended as a characterful, hand-rendered alternative to standard sans display faces—prioritizing personality, punch, and a cut-from-paper aesthetic over typographic neutrality. The irregular shaping and faceted curves suggest it was drawn to feel human and expressive while remaining broadly legible at larger sizes.
Spacing and sidebearings appear intentionally varied, creating a bouncy texture in running text that feels more like lettering than a neutral system font. The mix of squarish bowls and angled cuts produces strong black shape patterns, so the design tends to read as a series of bold silhouettes rather than delicate internal detail.