Sans Contrasted Tagiw 7 is a bold, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, branding, packaging, signage, playful, friendly, bouncy, quirky, handmade, approachability, expressiveness, handmade feel, display impact, personality, rounded, soft corners, irregular rhythm, wedge terminals, tilted cuts.
A lively sans with softly rounded forms and subtly uneven stroke behavior that gives letters a hand-drawn, cut-paper feel. Stems often show slight curvature and tapering, with wedge-like terminals and angled joins that keep the texture energetic rather than mechanical. Counters are generally open and round, and the overall spacing and widths vary from glyph to glyph, producing a loose, animated rhythm in words and lines. Numerals and capitals share the same chunky, simplified construction, favoring clear silhouettes over strict geometric consistency.
Best suited to headlines, posters, packaging, and branding where a friendly, characterful voice is desired. It also works well for display text in playful editorial layouts, event graphics, and signage that benefits from a handmade, approachable feel. For longer reading, it’s most effective when used sparingly as a typographic accent.
The tone is warm, informal, and slightly mischievous, like friendly signage or a children’s-book headline. Its deliberate irregularity reads as human and approachable, adding character and motion to short phrases and titles. The overall impression is upbeat and expressive rather than corporate or restrained.
The design appears intended to deliver an expressive, approachable sans that feels hand-crafted while staying legible at display sizes. By combining rounded structures with angled terminals and irregular rhythm, it aims to add personality and motion to contemporary layouts without relying on overt decorative motifs.
The design relies on distinctive angled cuts and gentle wobble in verticals to create personality, so the texture becomes more pronounced as size increases. Round letters (such as O/C/G) feel especially full and buoyant, while diagonals (like K/V/W/X) lean into sharp, graphic wedges that add contrast in the line.