Sans Contrasted Fyme 7 is a very bold, wide, very high contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, magazine, branding, packaging, dramatic, fashion, assertive, glamorous, editorial, display impact, editorial flair, luxury edge, brand presence, calligraphic, wedge terminals, tapered, crisp, angular.
This typeface presents a slanted, display-oriented structure with sculpted, high-contrast strokes that alternate between hefty vertical masses and razor-thin hairlines. Letterforms feel expansive with generous horizontal spread and strong diagonal energy, producing a lively rhythm across words. Terminals often resolve into sharp wedges and tapered cuts rather than rounded endings, and several characters show deliberate cut-ins and swooping entry/exit strokes that heighten the calligraphic impression. Counters are generally compact relative to the heavy main strokes, creating bold silhouettes and striking black/white interplay.
Best suited to large-size applications where its hairlines and sharp terminals can remain clear: headlines, magazine display typography, fashion or nightlife branding, posters, and premium packaging. It can also work for short pull quotes or titling, but its pronounced contrast and energetic slant make it less appropriate for long reading at small sizes.
The overall tone is theatrical and stylish, with a couture-like sharpness that reads as confident and attention-seeking. Its slanted momentum and knife-edge contrast add a sense of speed and spectacle, making text feel dramatic and headline-driven rather than neutral or restrained.
The font appears designed to deliver maximum visual impact through exaggerated contrast, sharp tapering, and an italicized, forward-leaning stance. Its forms prioritize expressive silhouette and editorial flair, aiming to feel modern, luxurious, and unmistakably display-first.
The design leans on pronounced diagonals and asymmetric stress, with occasional extremely thin connectors that act as visual accents. Numerals and capitals maintain the same sharp, cut terminal language, and rounded forms (like O/0) show strong internal contrast and a sculpted, poster-like presence.