Sans Other Ulwo 1 is a regular weight, normal width, medium contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, sports branding, tech branding, posters, ui accents, futuristic, sporty, technical, dynamic, sleek, high speed, tech aesthetic, display impact, brand modernity, angular, condensed feel, rounded corners, monoline, oblique stress.
A slanted, angular sans with monoline strokes and softly rounded corners that temper its sharp geometry. Letterforms lean forward with a consistent oblique angle, using squared curves and chamfer-like terminals to create a streamlined, engineered look. Counters tend toward rectangular and rounded-rectangle shapes, and many glyphs show subtle cut-ins and notched joins that add a techno rhythm. Overall spacing reads tight and efficient, with a slightly condensed impression in the capitals and a compact, controlled lowercase.
Best suited for short to medium-length display settings where its angular rhythm and italic energy can read as intentional—headlines, posters, esports/sports identities, product marks, and tech-forward packaging. It can also work as an accent face in interfaces (labels, section headers, dashboards) where a sleek, high-performance tone is desired.
The font projects speed and precision—confident, modern, and slightly aggressive without becoming chaotic. Its oblique stance and crisp, squared curvature evoke motorsport, sci‑fi interfaces, and performance branding. The tone feels contemporary and utilitarian, suited to messages that want to signal motion, efficiency, and technical competence.
The design appears intended to merge an italic, high-speed feel with squared, industrial geometry, producing a distinctive techno sans for contemporary branding and display. Its rounded-square construction and controlled spacing suggest a focus on consistency across the full alphanumeric set while maximizing a sense of motion.
The numeral set follows the same squared, forward-leaning construction, keeping a consistent silhouette across alphanumerics. Distinctive shapes like the angular diagonals (V/W/X/Y) and squared bowls help maintain a coherent “tech” texture in longer text, while the italic slant remains steady across caps, lowercase, and figures.