Sans Contrasted Oknaf 9 is a regular weight, wide, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: branding, headlines, ui, signage, packaging, futuristic, tech, sleek, geometric, industrial, modernize, differentiate, systematize, signal tech, rounded, modular, monolinear, squared, extended.
A clean, geometric sans with extended proportions and a modular construction. Strokes are generally even but show subtle contrast at curves and joins, with rounded corners and squared-off bowls creating a soft-rectangular silhouette. Counters tend toward squarish shapes, terminals are crisp and controlled, and curves are drawn with a consistent radius that keeps the rhythm steady across caps and lowercase. Overall spacing reads open and modern, with distinctive, engineered-looking forms that favor clarity and graphic uniformity.
Well-suited to brand marks, product identities, and headline typography where a modern, engineered personality is desired. It should also perform well in UI labels, dashboards, and wayfinding-style signage thanks to its open shapes and consistent geometry. The extended proportions make it particularly effective for short bursts of text—titles, navigation, posters, and packaging callouts.
The font conveys a contemporary, tech-forward tone—cool, efficient, and slightly sci‑fi. Its rounded-rect geometry and disciplined stroke behavior suggest digital interfaces, hardware labeling, and modern product ecosystems rather than expressive or historical lettering.
The design appears intended to deliver a contemporary geometric sans with a distinctive rounded-rect skeleton—balancing a clean, functional baseline with a recognizable high-tech character. Its consistent construction and controlled contrast suggest an emphasis on system coherence and strong performance in graphic and interface contexts.
Several glyphs emphasize a “square-round” motif (rounded rectangles and flattened curves), giving the alphabet a cohesive, system-like feel. The lowercase maintains a clean, constructed look with simplified joins, and the numerals match the same geometric logic for consistent display use.