Sans Contrasted Kyhi 10 is a light, normal width, very high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, magazines, branding, posters, packaging, editorial, fashion, modern, elegant, airly, display impact, refined contrast, modern elegance, editorial voice, hairline, crisp, monolinear feel, geometric, open counters.
A delicate, high-contrast sans with hairline joins and selectively thickened curves that create an animated, calligraphic rhythm. Letterforms are largely geometric and open, with rounded bowls and clean, straight terminals; many glyphs pair very thin verticals with heavier arcs or cross-strokes. Uppercase proportions feel display-oriented, with simplified construction and occasional dramatic strokes (notably in diagonals and curved segments). Lowercase stays compact and readable, using single-storey shapes where appropriate and maintaining generous counterforms. Numerals follow the same logic, mixing slender stems with boldened curves for a refined, graphic texture.
Best suited to headlines, subheads, and short blocks of text where the contrast can be appreciated—magazine layouts, fashion or beauty branding, posters, and premium packaging. It can work for interface or editorial accents, but the thinnest strokes suggest using it at comfortable sizes and with sufficient contrast against the background.
The tone is sleek and editorial, balancing minimalism with a couture-like contrast that feels contemporary and refined. Its sharp hairlines and controlled thick strokes give it a poised, high-end character suited to stylish, curated contexts rather than purely utilitarian text.
The design appears intended to deliver a modern sans voice with a couture-like twist, using pronounced weight modulation to add sophistication and visual sparkle while keeping overall forms clean and contemporary.
Stroke modulation is used as a design feature rather than traditional stress, producing a distinctive shimmer across words at display sizes. Spacing appears even and calm, but the extreme thin strokes and sudden weight shifts can make the texture feel more illustrative than purely neutral in longer passages.