Sans Contrasted Lebar 6 is a very light, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, editorial, fashion, branding, invitations, elegant, airy, modernist, refined, editorial voice, premium tone, modern refinement, display clarity, stylish minimalism, high-waisted, tapered, crisp, flared, calligraphic.
This typeface presents a slender, high-waisted construction with clear stroke modulation and tapered terminals. Curves are drawn with a controlled, slightly calligraphic tension—seen in the rounded bowls and the soft swelling into thin exits—while straight strokes remain crisp and clean. Counters are open and generous, and the overall rhythm feels light and spacious, with a delicate presence in both capitals and lowercase. Figures follow the same logic, mixing fine entry/exit strokes with round, airy forms that read clearly at display sizes.
Best suited to headlines, subheads, pull quotes, and other display-forward editorial settings where its delicate modulation and airy spacing can shine. It can also support premium branding applications—such as fashion, beauty, or cultural communications—and elegant print pieces like invitations or lookbooks, especially when set at moderate to large sizes.
The overall tone is refined and editorial, combining a modern, uncluttered skeleton with a subtle sense of crafted stroke movement. It feels poised and stylish rather than utilitarian, lending a quiet sophistication to headlines and short text. The contrast and tapering add a premium, fashion-forward character without becoming ornamental.
The design intent appears to be a contemporary, contrast-informed sans that brings the grace of tapered, calligraphic strokes into a clean, minimal framework. It aims to provide a distinctive, upscale voice while keeping letterforms straightforward and readable in typical headline and short-text use.
Uppercase forms lean toward simplicity with occasional distinctive flares and angled joins, while lowercase introduces more personality through soft hooks and tapered stems (notably in letters like a, g, and y). The design maintains consistency in how strokes thin at terminals and thicken through turns, creating a cohesive, polished texture in words and lines of text.