Sans Other Tejo 2 is a regular weight, very narrow, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, branding, signage, titles, industrial, technical, retro, mechanical, futuristic, space-saving, industrial feel, modular geometry, display impact, condensed, angular, chamfered, stencil-like, monolinear.
A condensed, monolinear sans with sharply angular construction and frequent chamfered corners. Many strokes terminate in clipped, beveled ends, creating an octagonal rhythm in curves and counters. The overall texture is crisp and dry, with a tall, compact footprint and tight internal spacing; rounded letters read as faceted forms rather than smooth bowls. Numerals and capitals keep a consistent vertical emphasis, while lowercase shares the same rigid geometry for a cohesive, engineered feel.
Best suited to display roles where its distinctive, engineered geometry can read at a glance—posters, title treatments, packaging, and brand marks that aim for a technical or industrial voice. It can also work for short interface labels or signage-style layouts where condensed width and a hard-edged rhythm are desirable.
The design conveys an industrial, technical tone—more machine-made than humanistic. Its faceted shapes and clipped terminals suggest utility labeling, sci‑fi interfaces, or retro-futurist signage, projecting a controlled, mechanical confidence.
The letterforms appear designed to reinterpret a utilitarian condensed sans through a faceted, chamfered lens, prioritizing a strong vertical silhouette and a consistent, modular construction. The goal seems to be a compact display face that feels mechanical and futuristic while remaining readable in short text settings.
The repeated use of notches and chamfers produces a subtle stencil-like impression without obvious bridging, and the condensed proportions make the font visually efficient in horizontal space. The faceted treatment is especially apparent in round forms (e.g., O, C, G) and in the angular joins of diagonals (e.g., V, W, X), contributing to a distinctive, uniform texture in lines of text.