Sans Contrasted Eddo 11 is a regular weight, very wide, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, branding, posters, interfaces, signage, futuristic, techy, sleek, industrial, confident, modern branding, technical tone, display clarity, distinctive width, rounded, geometric, extended, streamlined, monoline accents.
A streamlined sans with extended proportions and rounded geometry. Strokes are predominantly uniform but with clear contrast moments where joins, terminals, and diagonals thin noticeably, creating a crisp, engineered feel. Curves are broad and clean (notably in C, G, O, and S), while terminals tend to be squared-off with softened corners. The design favors horizontal emphasis and open counters, producing a wide, airy texture in text; round letters read strongly oval, and several diagonals (e.g., N, W, X, z) appear intentionally lighter, adding a distinctive, constructed rhythm.
Best suited to headlines, logos, and short-to-medium display text where its wide proportions and crisp contrast details can be appreciated. It also works well for UI titles, product naming, and signage systems that benefit from a contemporary, engineered look, while remaining readable in larger blocks at moderate sizes.
The overall tone is modern and technical, with a display-forward polish that suggests contemporary interfaces, automotive/industrial branding, and sci‑fi-leaning aesthetics. The wide stance and clean rounding feel confident and forward-looking, while the thin diagonal accents add a precision-instrument character.
The design appears intended to deliver a contemporary extended sans for modern visual systems, balancing soft rounding with precise, high-contrast detailing. Its constructed diagonals and wide rhythm suggest a focus on distinctive display presence without sacrificing straightforward readability.
Uppercase forms are especially expansive and stable, with a squared, rounded-rectangle logic in letters like D, E, F, and P. The lowercase is simple and highly legible, with single-storey a and g and a compact, rounded t. Numerals are consistent with the same wide, rounded construction; the slashed zero and stylized 1/4 introduce a technical, schematic flavor that stands out in sequences.