Sans Other Tevi 2 is a regular weight, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logotypes, posters, branding, tech ui, futuristic, techno, geometric, modular, experimental, distinct identity, system design, digital feel, display impact, stencil cuts, segmented, rounded, constructed, display.
A constructed sans with geometric bowls and straight, uniform strokes, punctuated by deliberate horizontal breaks that read like stencil or segmented-display cuts. Curves are clean and circular, terminals are mostly squared-off, and many glyphs share a consistent midline interruption that creates a strong rhythm across words. The overall color is even and monoline-like, but the repeated cut-throughs and simplified joins give it a modular, engineered feel. Figures and capitals follow the same system, producing a cohesive, highly stylized texture in text.
Best suited for headlines, posters, titles, and brand marks where its segmented construction can be appreciated. It can also work for tech-oriented interface accents, packaging, and event graphics when used with comfortable sizing and spacing. For long-form reading, it’s more effective as a display companion than a primary text face.
The repeated mid-stroke gaps and engineered geometry convey a futuristic, technical tone with a slightly experimental edge. It feels coded, industrial, and digitally influenced—more “interface” than “editorial,” with a distinctive, branded personality.
The design intention appears to be a geometric sans reimagined through a stencil/segmented motif, creating immediate recognizability and a strong contemporary-tech voice. The systematic midline breaks suggest a focus on visual identity and pattern-like word shapes over neutral readability.
Because the signature breaks occur in many letters, the font’s identity becomes strongest at larger sizes where the segmented construction is clearly visible; at smaller sizes those cut-throughs can start to compete with legibility. The design stays disciplined across uppercase, lowercase, and numerals, reinforcing a consistent system rather than isolated novelty shapes.