Sans Contrasted Legev 5 is a regular weight, normal width, high contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: sports branding, automotive, headlines, posters, tech ui, sporty, futuristic, dynamic, sleek, technical, convey motion, modernize tone, add emphasis, signal performance, tech styling, oblique, aerodynamic, angular, tapered, rounded corners.
A slanted, contrasted sans with streamlined, aerodynamic letterforms. Strokes show clear thick–thin modulation, with many terminals cut on a forward angle and corners softened into rounded joins, creating a smooth, continuous flow. Uppercase forms are wide and open with simplified geometry, while the lowercase is compact and slightly more cursive in rhythm, using single-storey shapes (notably the a and g) and tight apertures. Figures are similarly italicized and clean, with flat, angled bases and a consistent right-leaning stance that keeps spacing lively in text.
This face is well-suited to branding and display contexts that benefit from a sense of speed and modernity—sports identities, automotive or motorsport graphics, tech-forward packaging, and attention-grabbing headlines. It can also work for short UI labels or navigation elements when a dynamic, italic voice is desired, though its pronounced slant and contrast make it more naturally a display companion than a long-form text workhorse.
The overall tone is energetic and speed-oriented, with a modern, engineered feel. Its slant and tapered detailing evoke motion and precision, reading as contemporary and slightly sci‑fi without becoming decorative.
The font appears designed to deliver an italic-forward, performance-driven sans that feels fast and contemporary. Its contrasted strokes and angled terminals aim to add personality and momentum while keeping the overall construction clean and broadly legible.
The design maintains a consistent forward momentum across caps, lowercase, and numerals, with frequent wedge-like cuts that unify the set. In longer samples the texture is dark and smooth, with a strong horizontal pull created by the oblique axis and the curved, low-contrast counters in letters like e, o, and s.