Sans Other Hije 13 is a very bold, narrow, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'MultiType Pixel' by Cyanotype, 'Dimensions' by Dharma Type, 'Never' by Graphicxell, 'Blackbarry NF' by Nick's Fonts, 'Beni' by Nois, 'Ravenda' by Typehand Studio, 'Amarow' by Umka Type, and 'Muscle Cars' by Vozzy (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: posters, headlines, logotypes, packaging, signage, industrial, stenciled, retro, architectural, graphic, stencil effect, visual texture, attention grab, systematic geometry, modular, geometric, caps-heavy, high-impact, blocky.
A heavy, condensed sans with a modular, cut-out construction that reads like a contemporary stencil. Forms are built from broad vertical stems and rounded terminals, with distinctive internal slits and notches that segment counters and create a repeating striped rhythm through many letters (notably in E, F, G, S, and numerals). Curves are simplified into near-semicircular bowls, and joins are clean and abrupt, giving the alphabet a rigid, engineered feel. Spacing is compact and the overall texture is dense, with strong vertical emphasis and consistent, graphic negative spaces.
Best suited for display settings where its segmented construction can be appreciated—posters, headlines, branding marks, packaging, and bold signage. It can also work for short bursts of text (titles, pull quotes) when set with ample size and spacing, but it is primarily a statement face rather than a long-form workhorse.
The tone is bold and assertive, mixing industrial signage energy with a retro-futurist, Art Deco–adjacent flair. The repeated cut-ins add a sense of machinery, labeling, or architectural wayfinding, while the rounded geometry keeps it from feeling purely brutalist. Overall it conveys confidence, grit, and graphic theatricality.
The design appears intended to reinterpret a condensed sans through a stencil/cut-out lens, prioritizing immediate impact and a distinctive internal rhythm over conventional letterform continuity. Its consistent notches suggest a deliberate system meant to create a recognizable texture across mixed-case text and numerals.
The stencil-like interruptions are a defining feature and remain visible even at larger text sizes, creating a patterned texture across words. Because many interior gaps are intentionally narrow, the face benefits from generous size or careful contrast against the background to preserve the intended cut-out details.