Sans Other Lorow 7 is a regular weight, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, branding, packaging, signage, techno, industrial, retro, playful, modular, distinctive identity, stenciled geometry, tech aesthetic, signage feel, stencil, rounded, geometric, segmented, soft corners.
A geometric, monoline sans with rounded terminals and a segmented, stencil-like construction. Many curves and bowls are interrupted by consistent vertical gaps, giving counters a split appearance and creating a rhythmic pattern through words. Strokes stay even and smooth, with soft-cornered joins and simplified shapes that feel engineered rather than handwritten. Proportions are clean and modern, with open apertures and sturdy, highly regular forms that keep texture even in longer lines.
Best suited for headlines, posters, and branding where the segmented construction can act as a visual hook. It can work well in packaging, signage, and tech-leaning editorial callouts, especially when paired with a plainer text face for body copy. The consistent stroke and rounded geometry also make it effective for logotypes and short statements.
The repeated split-stroke motif lends a techno and industrial tone, evoking signage, fabricated lettering, and modular design systems. Despite the mechanical structure, the rounded ends and simplified curves keep the voice friendly and slightly playful, reading as retro-futurist rather than strictly utilitarian.
Likely designed to merge a clean geometric sans foundation with a distinctive split-stroke motif, producing a recognizable display voice without relying on ornament or contrast. The intention appears to be a modern, modular aesthetic that remains approachable through rounded terminals and simplified forms.
The distinctive breaks become a strong identifying feature at display sizes and create a noticeable pattern in running text. Numerals and key uppercase forms (notably the round letters) emphasize the segmented look, which can be used to add motion and structure to otherwise straightforward layouts.