Sans Other Sebo 1 is a regular weight, narrow, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, packaging, signage, techno, modular, industrial, retro, architectural, futuristic display, systematic geometry, industrial clarity, retro-tech mood, angular, geometric, condensed, square-cornered, stencil-like.
A condensed, monoline sans built from straight strokes and sharp angles, with a distinctly modular construction. Counters are narrow and often rectangular, and curves are minimized or replaced by chamfered corners, giving many glyphs a squared, engineered silhouette. Vertical stems dominate the rhythm, while diagonals appear in A, K, V, W, X, Y, and Z as crisp, planar cuts rather than smooth joins. The numerals follow the same rectilinear logic, with open, linear forms and a compact footprint that stays consistent across the set.
This design is best suited to display use where its angular construction can be appreciated: headlines, posters, logotypes, and packaging with a technical or industrial theme. It can also work for short UI labels or signage-style applications when a compact, high-structure look is desired, but it is less suited to long-form reading.
The overall tone feels technical and constructed, like signage cut from strips of material or drawn with drafting tools. Its angular geometry and tight spacing read as futuristic with a retro-digital edge, evoking industrial labeling, sci‑fi interfaces, and modernist display titling.
The font appears intended to deliver a compact, engineered sans that emphasizes geometry and straight-line efficiency over traditional humanist or grotesque forms. Its construction prioritizes a distinctive, system-like aesthetic that remains consistent across capitals, lowercase, and numerals for bold, branded display typography.
Distinctive details include frequent use of clipped corners and inset joins that create a subtle stencil/slot effect in places, plus simplified terminals that keep forms clean and utilitarian. The uppercase carries most of the visual authority, while the lowercase retains the same rigid, architectural vocabulary for a cohesive voice in mixed-case settings.