Sans Other Ohho 5 is a bold, narrow, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, branding, packaging, album art, quirky, hand-cut, playful, edgy, retro, novelty display, diy aesthetic, attention-grabbing, expressive texture, angular, irregular, blocky, jagged, compact.
A compact, sans-style display face built from chunky, angular strokes with a distinctly irregular, hand-made geometry. Letterforms lean on straight segments and sharp corners, with uneven stroke endings and subtly inconsistent joins that create a cut-paper or carved look. Counters are generally small and squared-off, and several glyphs show intentionally off-kilter proportions and asymmetrical details that add visual noise and character. The overall rhythm is tight and dense, with strong vertical presence and a rough, lively outline rather than polished uniformity.
Best suited for short, high-impact typography such as posters, titles, product packaging, event graphics, and logo wordmarks that benefit from a distinctive handmade texture. It also works well for playful or edgy branding systems where a rough, angular sans can carry the visual identity. For longer passages, it’s most effective as a display accent rather than a primary text face.
The font feels mischievous and energetic, like a DIY poster alphabet or a stylized “spooky-fun” title treatment. Its jagged, slightly warped construction gives it a restless, handmade personality that reads as playful rather than formal. The tone suggests novelty and attitude—good for grabbing attention and setting an unconventional mood.
The design appears intended to capture a handcrafted, cut-out aesthetic within a simplified sans framework, prioritizing personality and visual punch over typographic neutrality. Its controlled irregularity and angular construction aim to create a memorable display voice that feels informal, energetic, and slightly gritty.
Uppercase and lowercase share the same angular construction, with simplified, boxy curves and occasional exaggerated corners that help maintain a consistent voice. Numerals follow the same cut, blocky logic, staying compact and punchy for headlines. Because the shapes are intentionally irregular, spacing and texture become a defining part of the style, especially in longer lines of text.