Sans Other Tiry 7 is a light, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui labels, headlines, posters, branding, packaging, tech, modular, minimal, futuristic, geometric, geometric construction, tech aesthetic, display clarity, modern branding, angular, square, wireframe, cornered, constructed.
A constructed geometric sans built from straight strokes and crisp right angles, with a consistent line weight and generous internal counters. Curves are largely replaced by squared bowls and chamfered or diagonal joins, giving many forms an octagonal, modular feel (notably in rounded letters and numerals). Terminals are clean and blunt, and the overall drawing emphasizes open shapes and simplified anatomy, producing a slightly segmented rhythm in text. Uppercase forms are wide and schematic, while lowercase keeps a similarly rectilinear logic with boxy rounds and short, squared shoulders.
Well suited to interface labeling, wayfinding-style captions, and display typography where a technical or futuristic impression is desired. It can also work for logos and packaging that benefit from a modular, engineered aesthetic; for extended reading, it is best used at comfortable sizes and with ample spacing to keep the angular rhythm clear.
The font projects a technical, system-like tone—measured, modern, and deliberately engineered. Its grid-based construction and angular ‘wireframe’ presence suggest digital interfaces, sci‑fi labeling, and retro-futurist graphics rather than editorial warmth.
Likely designed to translate a grid-based, polygonal construction into a clean sans voice—prioritizing a distinctive geometric texture, sharp corners, and simplified letter anatomy for contemporary tech-forward communication.
The design’s reliance on corners and diagonal cuts creates distinctive silhouettes in letters like G, S, and Q, which read as stylized signage forms. In longer text, the repeating right-angle motifs produce a strong pattern, making it most effective when the geometric flavor is intended to be noticed.