Sans Other Ubgi 7 is a very light, narrow, high contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logotypes, packaging, invitations, editorial, elegant, fashion, airy, poetic, contemporary, expressive display, premium branding, modern elegance, editorial flair, calligraphic, swashy, slanted, refined, delicate.
A delicate, right-slanted display face with pronounced contrast between hairline joins and heavier stressed strokes. Forms are narrow and tall with compact bowls and long, flowing terminals that taper to sharp points. Construction reads largely sans in its structure, but many glyphs introduce calligraphic gestures—looped entries, teardrop-like joins, and occasional swash-like extenders—creating an animated rhythm across words. Counters are open and the spacing feels springy, with alternation between tight internal shapes and airy sidebearings that keeps lines lively.
Best suited to short to medium setting sizes where its hairline details and tapered terminals can remain crisp—such as fashion/editorial headlines, boutique branding, perfume and beauty packaging, event invitations, and promotional typography. It can work for pull quotes or brief subheads when paired with a calmer text face for body copy.
The font conveys a refined, couture-leaning tone with a light, airy sophistication. Its italic motion and tapered terminals add a sense of speed and grace, suggesting editorial elegance and a slightly dramatic, romantic flair without becoming ornate script.
The design appears intended to blend modern sans-like skeletons with calligraphic italic expression, creating a distinctive display voice that feels premium and expressive while remaining relatively clean in overall construction.
Uppercase shows stylized, sometimes unconventional silhouettes (notably in curved letters and the ampersand), while lowercase maintains a consistent slanted cadence with distinctive looped descenders and entry strokes. Numerals follow the same high-contrast, calligraphic logic, with several figures using elongated curves and slender verticals that prioritize style over utilitarian clarity at small sizes.