Sans Other Jurit 11 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logotypes, posters, ui labels, packaging, futuristic, tech, industrial, sci‑fi, modular, tech branding, sci‑fi styling, stencil motif, systematic design, display impact, rounded corners, stencil cuts, geometric, squared, monoline.
A geometric sans with squared proportions and generously rounded outer corners. Strokes are largely monoline, with frequent vertical slit breaks and internal cutouts that create a stencil-like construction across many glyphs (notably in bowls and terminals). Curves are built from broad-radius arcs rather than true circles, producing a compact, engineered rhythm. Counters tend to be partially segmented, and several letters use simplified, modular shapes; numerals follow the same system with consistent notches and occasional split stems.
Best suited for display typography such as headlines, brand marks, posters, product/tech packaging, and UI labeling where a distinctive engineered voice is desired. It can work for short supporting text (captions, navigation, on-screen labels) when set with adequate size and spacing, but the cutouts make it less ideal for long-form reading.
The repeating splits and rounded-rect geometry give the font a futuristic, technical tone—more "interface" and "equipment marking" than neutral text. It reads as deliberately synthetic and mechanized, with a sci‑fi flavor that feels suited to modern tech branding and digital environments.
The font appears designed to deliver a modular, high-tech identity through rounded-rect construction and repeated stencil breaks, creating a recognizable signature across the character set. The goal seems to be a contemporary sci‑fi/industrial look that stays clean and geometric while remaining bold enough for branding and titles.
Legibility is strongest at medium to large sizes where the stencil gaps remain clearly resolved; at small sizes the narrow breaks could visually fill in or blur. The design maintains a consistent motif across uppercase, lowercase, and figures, making it cohesive for systems that mix letters and numbers.