Sans Contrasted Seda 2 is a regular weight, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui labels, branding, posters, signage, packaging, modern, technical, clean, assertive, utilitarian, clarity, modernization, distinctiveness, functionality, geometric, rounded corners, open apertures, crisp, stable.
This sans serif shows squared, geometric construction softened by subtly rounded corners and clean curves. Strokes are generally even but with noticeable contrast in joints and terminals, giving letters a slightly engineered, cut-from-shapes feel rather than purely monoline. Proportions are steady and compact, with broad bowls (C, O, Q) and fairly straight-sided verticals; counters are open and legible, and curves meet stems with crisp, decisive transitions. The lowercase is straightforward and functional, with a single-storey “a” and “g,” a round “e” with an open eye, and a “t” that reads clearly at text sizes. Numerals are sturdy and simplified, matching the letterforms’ square-leaning geometry.
It fits well for interface labels, dashboards, and product UI where clean forms and clear counters help scanning. The distinctive, engineered shapes also suit branding, packaging, and headline settings that want a modern, slightly industrial voice without going fully display-stylized. It should perform reliably in short text blocks, captions, and wayfinding-style signage.
The overall tone is contemporary and practical, with a slightly industrial character. Its firm structure and controlled curves suggest reliability and clarity, while the mild contrast and rounded touches keep it from feeling cold or overly mechanical.
The design appears intended to balance straightforward, workmanlike readability with a geometric, constructed personality. By combining stable proportions with mild contrast and shaped joins, it aims to feel contemporary and purposeful while remaining versatile for everyday typographic use.
Several glyphs emphasize geometric shaping and distinctive cut-ins/notches at joins, which adds personality without reducing readability. The rhythm stays consistent in mixed-case text, and the punctuation-like details (such as the dot on “i/j”) appear square and deliberate, reinforcing the technical feel.