Sans Other Sefi 10 is a regular weight, narrow, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui labels, headlines, posters, branding, packaging, techno, retro, geometric, mechanical, utilitarian, systematic, futuristic, industrial, display, angular, boxy, modular, condensed, skeletal.
A monoline, angular sans built from straight strokes and hard corners, with a distinctly squared, modular construction. Curves are largely avoided; counters tend toward rectangles, and terminals often end flat with occasional clipped or notched joins. Proportions are compact and condensed overall, with tall ascenders/uppercase and a relatively contained lowercase that stays crisp and open. The design keeps a consistent stroke thickness while allowing letterforms to vary in width for fit and rhythm, producing a tight, technical texture in text.
This style is well suited to display use where a technical or digital mood is desired—interfaces, HUD-style graphics, posters, album art, and brand marks that lean industrial or sci‑fi. It can also work for short blocks of text in captions or labeling when a tight, schematic look is beneficial, especially at medium-to-large sizes where the angular details stay clear.
The overall tone feels techno and retro-futurist, like signage from early digital systems or minimalist industrial labeling. Its rigid geometry and sparse detailing give it a mechanical, engineered character that reads as efficient and slightly game-like. The sharp corners and boxy counters add a cold, functional edge rather than a friendly or humanist warmth.
The design appears intended to evoke a constructed, systemized sans that feels at home on grids and in digital contexts. By prioritizing straight segments, squared counters, and consistent strokes, it aims for a clean, engineered presence that remains readable while projecting a distinctive, futuristic identity.
Distinctive details include squared bowls and counters, a strongly rectilinear “O/0” style, and simplified diagonals that keep forms legible while maintaining the grid-like aesthetic. Spacing appears designed for clean alignment and consistent vertical rhythm, making the font’s texture feel orderly even when letter widths shift. The overall impression is intentionally schematic, emphasizing structure over calligraphic nuance.