Sans Other Gifa 9 is a very bold, wide, medium contrast, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, sports branding, event graphics, packaging, industrial, athletic, stencil-like, retro, assertive, impact, ruggedness, signage, display, blocky, angular, beveled, chamfered, squared.
A heavy, block-built sans with compact counters and prominent chamfered corners that create a faceted, cut-metal look. Strokes are largely uniform with abrupt terminals and squared geometry, producing strong, poster-like silhouettes. The lowercase is sturdy and simplified, with a tall x-height and minimal modulation; curves are tightened into squarish rounds (notably in o/c/e), and joins are crisp and mechanical. Overall spacing and rhythm feel dense and sturdy, optimized for impact rather than delicacy.
Best suited to headlines, posters, and short, high-impact lines where its blocky construction and faceted corners can be appreciated. It fits sports branding, industrial-themed graphics, labels, and packaging that benefit from a strong, engineered presence. For longer text, larger sizes and generous line spacing help maintain clarity as counters and apertures stay relatively tight.
The font conveys a tough, utilitarian energy—part industrial signage, part sports display. Its beveled, stencil-adjacent cuts add a rugged, engineered tone that reads as bold, loud, and no-nonsense, with a slight retro arcade or varsity poster flavor.
The design appears intended as a display face that maximizes visual weight and presence through squared forms and chamfered detailing. Its systematic cut-corner language suggests a goal of creating a rugged, manufactured aesthetic while keeping the letterforms simple and highly legible at headline scales.
The chamfers and occasional cut-in notches introduce distinctive internal shapes that help differentiate letters at larger sizes, while the compact apertures and tight counters can darken quickly in smaller settings. Numerals share the same squared, cut-corner construction, reinforcing a consistent, hard-edged system across letters and figures.