Sans Other Teba 13 is a very light, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: logotypes, headlines, posters, packaging, invitations, art deco, modernist, geometric, elegant, airy, deco revival, geometric clarity, decorative minimalism, brand distinction, stencil cuts, inline breaks, high contrast feel, minimal, refined.
A crisp, monoline sans with geometric construction and deliberate breaks through strokes, creating an inline/stencil-like articulation. Curves are drawn as near-perfect arcs with small discontinuities at key points, while straight strokes stay clean and vertical, producing a precise, engineered rhythm. Proportions are open and lightly built, with rounded bowls and consistent stroke endings that feel clipped or segmented rather than fully closed in several letters. Overall spacing reads generous and the forms remain highly simplified, emphasizing circles, verticals, and diagonals over calligraphic modulation.
Best suited to display settings where the segmented geometry can be appreciated—brand marks, headlines, posters, and fashion or lifestyle packaging. It can also work for short editorial pull quotes or titling, especially at larger sizes where the stroke breaks stay clear and intentional.
The segmented strokes and geometric skeleton give the face a polished Art Deco/modernist tone—sleek, stylish, and slightly futuristic. It feels upscale and editorial, with a display-oriented personality that reads as designed and intentional rather than purely utilitarian.
The design appears intended to reinterpret a clean geometric sans through an inline/stencil treatment, adding distinction without adding weight. Its consistent construction and controlled quirks suggest a focus on stylish branding and titling rather than long-form text economy.
Distinctive breaks appear in many round and semi-round forms (notably in characters like C, G, O, Q, e, o), which adds visual sparkle but also introduces a decorative texture across longer lines. The numerals follow the same segmented logic, keeping a cohesive system across letters and figures.