Sans Other Tiri 1 is a light, narrow, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, ui labels, packaging, techno, futuristic, architectural, schematic, retro digital, stylization, futurism, technical tone, modular design, rectilinear, geometric, angular, modular, open counters.
A highly rectilinear, geometric sans built from uniform strokes and square-cornered turns. Curves are minimized or rendered as segmented arcs, giving many glyphs a boxy, constructed silhouette with occasional chamfered or pointed joins (notably in V/W/X). Counters tend to be open and squared, terminals are flat, and proportions feel condensed with a tall, linear rhythm. The digit set follows the same modular logic, with sharp corners and simplified, mostly straight-sided forms.
Best suited to headlines, logos, posters, and branding moments where a technical or futuristic voice is desired. It can also work for short UI labels, display captions, or packaging callouts where its constructed geometry helps differentiate and signal a digital/industrial theme.
The overall tone reads technical and futuristic, like a display alphabet drawn for interfaces, instrumentation, or schematic labeling. Its modular construction and angular details evoke a retro-digital feel—precise, engineered, and intentionally stylized rather than neutral.
The design intent appears to be a distinctive, constructed sans that prioritizes a modular, engineered look over conventional humanist readability. Its geometry and sharp detailing suggest a purpose-built display face meant to communicate technology, precision, and a retro-future sensibility.
Distinctive joins and cut-ins create recognizable silhouettes (e.g., the hooked/segmented diagonals and the pointed vertex treatments), while the consistent stroke weight keeps texture even across lines. At text sizes the squared apertures and tight spacing can feel assertive and mechanical, favoring short bursts of copy over immersive reading.