Sans Other Didiv 11 is a bold, normal width, low contrast, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, logos, packaging, signage, industrial, rugged, playful, retro, hand-cut, textured display, hand-cut effect, industrial voice, signage feel, stenciled, angular, faceted, notched, irregular.
A heavy, blocky sans with faceted curves and chiseled corners, where bowls and counters are often polygonal rather than round. Strokes are mostly uniform, but edges show intentional irregularities—small nicks, notches, and tapered cuts that create a hand-cut or stamped rhythm. Terminals are predominantly flat, and many letters feature internal cutouts that read like punched shapes, giving the alphabet a constructed, slightly distressed texture. Proportions are compact and sturdy, with large counters in letters like O and D and simplified, geometric figures that keep the overall silhouette strong at display sizes.
Best suited for posters, headlines, and branding where the faceted, punched construction can be a feature rather than a distraction. It can work well on packaging and signage that aims for a rugged or handcrafted feel, and it benefits from generous sizing and spacing to keep the interior cutouts clear.
The tone is rugged and industrial, with a playful roughness that feels more crafted than mechanical. Its choppy, carved detailing suggests utilitarian signage and DIY production, lending a retro poster energy without becoming fully vintage-script or decorative.
The design appears intended to combine a sturdy sans foundation with deliberate cut and notch artifacts, creating a display face that reads as built, stamped, or carved. Its consistent angular language across caps, lowercase, and figures suggests an emphasis on personality and texture over neutrality in text settings.
The cutaway details can create lively texture in words, but they also add visual noise in dense settings, especially where small apertures and interior punch-outs cluster (for example in B, 8, and 9). Numerals are similarly blocky and punchy, matching the alphabet’s notched construction.