Sans Contrasted Faby 7 is a bold, wide, high contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, sports branding, posters, packaging, logos, sporty, dynamic, technical, assertive, modern, speed emphasis, display impact, brand presence, modern utility, oblique, angular, square-cut, condensed caps, rounded corners.
A slanted sans with a compact, forward-leaning stance and a distinctly engineered feel. Strokes show clear modulation, with heavier verticals and thinner connecting diagonals, producing crisp contrast without any serif detailing. Many terminals are square-cut, while corners are subtly rounded, and several forms (notably C/G/O/Q and the numerals) lean toward squarish, rounded-rectangle bowls rather than pure circles. The rhythm is tight and efficient, with relatively narrow uppercase proportions, short-to-moderate ascenders/descenders, and clean, open counters that keep the bold shapes readable in display settings.
Best suited to short, high-impact text such as headlines, brand marks, posters, product packaging, and promotional graphics. The strong slant and contrast help it stand out in fast-scanning contexts like sports or tech-forward branding, while the open counters support legibility in large sizes and on-screen display.
The overall tone is energetic and performance-oriented, communicating speed, motion, and decisiveness through the consistent oblique angle and brisk, clipped terminals. It feels contemporary and utilitarian, with a hint of motorsport or athletic branding where clarity and impact matter more than softness or ornament.
The design appears intended to deliver a fast, aerodynamic italic voice with a crisp, technical silhouette. Its squared curves, clipped terminals, and controlled contrast suggest a focus on modern display typography for branding and titling where momentum and strength are key.
The uppercase set reads especially compact and uniform, while the lowercase introduces more curvature and a slightly more human rhythm, creating a useful contrast for mixed-case headlines. Numerals follow the same squared, italicized logic, giving a cohesive, signage-like consistency across letters and figures.