Pixel Other Veje 13 is a very light, narrow, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui labels, tech branding, sci-fi titles, posters, packaging accents, technical, futuristic, drafting, experimental, minimal, segment aesthetic, digital feel, texture creation, display legibility, dotted, segmented, monoline, skeletal, quantized.
A skeletal, monoline design built from short dash-like segments, leaving intentional gaps along curves and stems. Letterforms are lightly slanted with a steady rhythm, combining geometric construction (notably in rounds like C/O/Q) with simpler straight-stroke structures in E/F/H. Corners and terminals resolve as small breaks rather than solid joins, giving counters and bowls an airy, perforated feel. Proportions are compact and generally linear, with slightly varied character widths that keep spacing lively while maintaining an overall orderly grid-like discipline.
Best suited to short display settings where the dashed construction can be appreciated—interface labeling, tech-forward identity accents, sci‑fi or experimental titles, and poster headlines. It can also work as a secondary texture layer on packaging or editorial graphics, while longer passages benefit from generous size and spacing to preserve legibility.
The broken-stroke construction reads as technical and futuristic, like plotted drafting marks, LED test patterns, or a stencil drawn with intermittent ink. Its light, perforated presence feels experimental and precise rather than decorative, suggesting data, interfaces, or schematic labeling.
The design appears intended to translate a quantized, segment-based drawing logic into a readable alphabet—prioritizing a distinctive broken-line texture and a clean, engineered rhythm over conventional continuous strokes.
The intermittent segmentation is consistent across uppercase, lowercase, and numerals, which helps the font remain cohesive even when set in longer text. In continuous samples, the dashed strokes create a shimmering texture that becomes more prominent than individual stroke contrast, so clarity depends heavily on size and background contrast.