Sans Contrasted Geti 11 is a very bold, very wide, medium contrast, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, sports branding, packaging, signage, industrial, athletic, retro, assertive, utilitarian, impact, ruggedness, branding, display, octagonal, chamfered, blocky, compressed apertures, vertical stress.
A heavy, block-built display sans with squared proportions and frequent chamfered corners that create an octagonal silhouette across rounds and diagonals. Strokes are thick with subtle internal modulation visible in counters and joins, and many shapes rely on straight segments with clipped terminals rather than curves. Counters tend to be narrow and geometric; the lowercase shows a high x-height with compact ascenders and descenders, helping forms stay dense and uniform. Overall spacing reads tight and sturdy, with wide bodies and strong horizontal slabs on letters like E, F, and T reinforcing a poster-like rhythm.
Best suited for large-scale typography where weight and presence are the priority: headlines, posters, event graphics, sports identity systems, and bold packaging. It can also work for short UI labels or signage when ample size and spacing are available.
The font projects a tough, no-nonsense tone—mechanical and forceful—while the clipped corners add a retro, varsity-adjacent flavor. It feels engineered for impact and authority, suggesting signage, sports branding, and bold headlines rather than quiet reading.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum visual impact through a geometric, chamfered construction and high x-height, maintaining a compact, rugged texture across uppercase, lowercase, and numerals. Its shapes balance strict straight-sided geometry with slight modulation to keep the heavy forms readable and distinctive.
Uppercase characters emphasize squared geometry and deep notches, while numerals inherit the same chamfered construction for a consistent, stenciled-by-blocks feel. The sample text shows that the dense counters and heavy mass can close up at smaller sizes, but it remains highly legible and punchy at headline scale.