Sans Other Teha 1 is a light, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, branding, logos, posters, titles, futuristic, minimal, technical, art-deco, distinctive detailing, display impact, tech aesthetic, geometric clarity, monoline, geometric, stencil cuts, rounded corners, open counters.
A monoline geometric sans with circular bowls and straight-sided stems, built from clean arcs and crisp terminals. Many glyphs feature deliberate cut-ins and breaks—often as small horizontal notches or banded interruptions across bowls and stems—creating a subtle stencil-like construction. Curves stay close to perfect circles (notably in C, O, Q, and numerals), while diagonals are sharp and linear (V, W, X, Y). The lowercase is similarly streamlined, with single-storey forms and compact, rounded counters; overall spacing reads even, and the design maintains a consistent mechanical rhythm across letters and figures.
Best suited for headlines, brand marks, and short UI or product naming where the distinctive cut details can be appreciated. It works especially well for tech, sci-fi, and modern lifestyle themes in posters, packaging, and title treatments; for extended text, it will be most comfortable at larger sizes.
The cut-line details and circular geometry give the face a futuristic, display-forward tone that feels engineered and slightly retro in an art-deco/techno direction. It communicates precision and modernity while staying restrained and minimal rather than aggressive or playful.
The design appears intended to merge a clean geometric sans skeleton with a signature set of stencil-like breaks, producing a recognizable, contemporary display voice while keeping letterforms disciplined and systematic.
The repeated interruption motif becomes a key identifying feature, especially on round letters and in the numerals, where it reads like a band or aperture through the form. This detailing adds character at larger sizes but can visually thin or fragment strokes in smaller settings, so size and contrast should be considered in application.