Sans Contrasted Lodoz 17 is a light, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: editorial, book text, magazine, headlines, branding, refined, literary, artful, classic, airy, elegant text, editorial voice, expressive contrast, distinctive display, calligraphic, tapered, sharp, flared, open.
A lightly built, high-clarity text face with calligraphic modulation and tapered stroke endings that read like subtle flares rather than full serifs. Curves are smooth and fairly open, while terminals frequently come to crisp points or thin wedges, creating a lively rhythm across words. Uppercase forms are narrow and elegant with prominent diagonals in letters like A, V, W, and Y, and the lowercase keeps a clean, bookish structure with a two-storey a, a looped g, and a simple, slightly tapered i/j treatment. Numerals are slender and expressive, with distinctive angled terminals and a flowing 2 and 7.
Well suited to editorial settings such as magazines, book interiors, and refined long-form layouts where a bit of character is welcome. It can also work effectively for headlines, pull quotes, and brand wordmarks that want a classic-but-contemporary voice with visible stroke energy.
The overall tone feels cultivated and slightly dramatic—more like editorial typography than utilitarian UI. The pointed terminals and gently modulated strokes add a touch of sophistication and personality while staying restrained enough for continuous reading.
The font appears designed to bridge readable text construction with a more expressive, calligraphy-informed stroke finish. Its intent seems to be adding elegance and individuality through tapered terminals and controlled contrast while remaining practical for paragraph typography.
The design relies on sharp tapering at stroke ends to create sparkle at larger sizes, while maintaining open counters and consistent spacing in text. Diagonal strokes are a key motif, giving headlines a crisp, architectural presence without becoming heavy or decorative.