Sans Contrasted Enfu 5 is a regular weight, normal width, high contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: branding, sportswear, posters, headlines, ui accents, sporty, futuristic, tech, dynamic, sleek, speed cue, tech styling, display impact, brand distinctiveness, instrumental clarity, rounded corners, oblique angle, aerodynamic, condensed feel, sharp terminals.
A slanted, sans-serif design with a streamlined, slightly squared skeleton and generously rounded corners. Strokes show clear modulation, with thicker vertical/diagonal stems and noticeably lighter connecting strokes, producing a crisp contrasted rhythm. Counters tend toward rectangular/lozenge shapes, and many terminals are tapered or softly clipped, reinforcing an engineered, aerodynamic look. Spacing is moderately tight with a forward-leaning cadence, while letterforms maintain consistent curvature and corner radii across caps, lowercase, and numerals.
Best suited to short-to-medium display settings such as logos, sports and automotive branding, event posters, packaging, and title treatments. It can also work for UI accents (labels, badges, dashboards) where a dynamic, technical voice is desired, while extended small-size reading would benefit from careful sizing and spacing due to the strong slant and stroke modulation.
The overall tone feels fast, technical, and performance-oriented—suggesting speed, precision, and modern machinery. Its oblique stance and angular-yet-rounded geometry evoke motorsport, sci‑fi interfaces, and contemporary product design where motion and efficiency are key.
The design appears intended to deliver a modern, speed-driven sans with a distinctive contrasted construction and rounded-square geometry. It emphasizes forward motion and a precision-built aesthetic, aiming for high impact in branding and display typography.
Distinctive details include squared, rounded-rectangle bowls (notably in characters like O/0) and compact joins that keep shapes crisp at display sizes. The numerals and uppercase share the same engineered geometry, giving mixed alphanumeric strings a cohesive, instrument-like texture.