Sans Other Tede 6 is a light, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, branding, posters, logos, packaging, futuristic, techy, minimal, experimental, precise, distinctiveness, modernization, systematic style, display impact, geometric, stenciled, modular, gapped, high-contrast forms.
A geometric sans with clean, monoline strokes and frequent intentional gaps that create a stencil-like, segmented construction. Many curves are drawn as open arcs with breaks at terminals and join areas, producing a modular rhythm across the alphabet. Straight stems are crisp and vertical, while bowls and rounds are broadly circular, giving the design a precise, engineered feel. The overall spacing reads open and airy, and the figures and punctuation mirror the same interrupted-stroke logic for a consistent system.
Best suited to headlines, branding, and short bursts of text where its segmented geometry can read clearly and act as a visual signature. It can work well for tech-forward identities, product packaging, posters, and interface-style labels where a precise, engineered mood is desirable.
The broken-stroke detailing gives the font a distinctly futuristic, technical tone—more like interface labeling or industrial marking than conventional text typography. Its minimal forms and deliberate interruptions feel experimental and modern, suggesting motion, circuitry, or cut vinyl/laser-cut signage aesthetics.
The design appears intended to reinterpret a regular sans through a modular, cut or interrupted stroke system, emphasizing geometric construction and a contemporary, technology-leaning personality while remaining broadly readable in larger settings.
Distinctive interruptions appear repeatedly in counters and along curves (notably in rounded letters and numerals), making the design most recognizable at display sizes. The stylistic gaps reduce continuous stroke continuity, so very small sizes or dense paragraphs may lose clarity compared with more conventional sans designs.