Sans Other Jira 6 is a regular weight, very wide, monoline, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, packaging, ui display, futuristic, tech, industrial, sci‑fi, modular, sci‑fi styling, technical labeling, graphic impact, modular system, rounded corners, stencil-like, segmented, geometric, angular.
A geometric, segmented sans with monoline strokes and frequent intentional breaks that create a stencil-like construction. Forms are built from straight runs and rounded-corner rectangles, with occasional sharp diagonals in letters like K, V, W, X, and Z. Counters are often open or implied, terminals tend to be squared off, and the overall rhythm feels modular—like parts snapped to a grid—while widths vary noticeably across the alphabet.
Best suited for headlines, branding marks, posters, product/packaging graphics, and on-screen display contexts where a tech-forward personality is desired. It works especially well in short phrases and larger sizes where the segmented construction reads clearly and becomes a distinctive graphic texture.
The letterforms project a futuristic, engineered tone reminiscent of interface lettering, hardware labeling, and sci‑fi titling. The segmented joins and open corners add a coded, technical feel, while the rounded corners keep the voice friendly rather than aggressive.
The font appears intended to reinterpret a clean sans through a modular, cut-out construction that emphasizes a futuristic/technical aesthetic. Its consistent stroke weight and repeated corner language suggest a system designed for bold, graphic impact rather than invisible body-text neutrality.
The design leans on negative-space cut-ins and separated strokes to define structure, which creates strong visual character at display sizes but can introduce ambiguity in dense text. Numerals follow the same segmented logic, with squared curves and open joints that reinforce the techno system.