Sans Contrasted Tylu 15 is a regular weight, normal width, very high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, editorial, magazine, branding, posters, elegant, fashion, refined, dramatic, luxury tone, display impact, editorial voice, modern classic, hairline joins, wedge terminals, crisp curves, sharp apexes, high-waist caps.
This typeface presents a highly contrasted, upright construction with hairline-thin connectors and robust vertical stems. Terminals are predominantly sharp and tapered, with wedge-like cuts and pointed joins that create a crisp, chiseled silhouette. Capitals feel tall and poised, with narrow internal apertures in letters like E/F and a clean, open C/G structure; curves are smooth but tightly controlled, producing a polished rhythm. The lowercase maintains a traditional, text-friendly skeleton (two-storey a and g), with strong vertical stress and compact bowls, while numerals echo the same contrast and sharp finishing for a cohesive set.
This font is well suited to headlines, magazine display, and branded typography where contrast and sharp terminals can carry the visual voice. It works especially well in editorial layouts, cover lines, pull quotes, and high-impact posters, and can also serve premium wordmarks when set with generous spacing.
The overall tone is sophisticated and high-end, with a dramatic contrast that reads as luxurious and design-forward. It feels confident and formal, leaning toward the visual language of fashion, culture, and premium editorial typography rather than utilitarian UI text.
The design appears intended to deliver a modern, premium display voice built on classic letterform proportions, emphasizing dramatic contrast and crisp, tapered finishing for visual impact in larger text settings.
In larger sizes the hairlines and tapered terminals become a defining feature, giving the face a sparkling, calligraphic sharpness without leaning into overt ornament. The mix of delicate horizontals and heavier verticals creates a lively texture, especially in mixed-case setting and in punctuation-heavy lines.