Sans Other Mofu 6 is a very bold, normal width, medium contrast, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, album art, logotypes, packaging, retro, playful, funky, chunky, space-age, display impact, retro futurism, graphic texture, modular styling, rounded, blobby, stencil-like, modular, geometric.
A heavy, rounded display sans built from soft rectangular forms with pronounced corner radii and frequent vertical splits that read like inlined or stenciled counters. Many letters are constructed from separated lobes and capsules, creating internal white channels that vary from tight slits to broader cut-ins, and producing a modular, segmented rhythm across words. Curves are smooth and swollen, joins are simplified, and terminals tend to be blunt or softly tapered, with occasional teardrop-like notches that add motion. Spacing appears generous for the weight, and the overall texture is dense but patterned by the recurring interior breaks.
Best suited to headlines, posters, album/cover art, and branding moments that benefit from a bold, retro-futuristic stamp. It can work for logotypes and packaging where the segmented forms become a recognizable signature, and for short editorial callouts or titles set at display sizes.
The segmented, pillowy construction gives the type a late-60s/70s futuristic pop feel—confident, upbeat, and slightly quirky. It projects a bold, graphic voice with a playful edge, more expressive than neutral, and works best when its distinctive internal cuts can be appreciated.
The design appears intended to reinterpret a rounded geometric sans through a modular, partially stenciled construction, turning counters and joins into graphic cutaways. The goal is a distinctive display texture—high impact, memorable silhouettes, and a consistent internal-striping motif across the alphabet and figures.
In longer lines the repeated vertical splits create a strong stripe motif, which can be visually engaging but also increases patterning; it rewards larger sizes and shorter text runs. Numerals and capitals match the same modular logic, keeping the set cohesive and poster-forward.