Sans Contrasted Lekes 3 is a regular weight, narrow, medium contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, sportswear, gaming ui, techno, futuristic, sporty, tactical, angular, tech styling, speed, precision, display impact, branding voice, octagonal, faceted, chamfered, sharp, slanted.
This typeface is a slanted, geometric sans built from straight strokes and crisp angles, with corners frequently chamfered into octagonal facets. Curves are minimized or constructed as segmented arcs, giving round letters like O/Q/0 a cut, polygonal silhouette. Stroke endings tend to be blunt and squared, while joins create sharp, engineered notches that emphasize a technical, drawn-with-a-ruler feel. The rhythm is compact and forward-leaning, with slightly uneven glyph widths that keep the texture lively rather than strictly monospaced.
It works best for headlines, logos, and short-form messaging where the faceted geometry can read clearly and set a strong theme. The numerals are especially suited to scoreboards, uniforms, product labeling, and interface elements that benefit from a technical, high-impact aesthetic. For long passages, it’s more effective as a stylistic accent than as the primary text face.
The overall tone reads as futuristic and performance-oriented, evoking sci‑fi interfaces, racing numbers, and industrial labeling. Its angled construction and faceted counters project a precise, tactical mood—more mechanical than friendly, and more display-driven than neutral text.
The design intention appears to be a contemporary, techno-leaning sans that signals speed and precision through slant, angular construction, and polygonal shaping. By replacing smooth curves with beveled segments and keeping terminals blunt, it aims to deliver a distinctive display voice for modern, high-energy visual systems.
Distinctive features include polygonal bowls (notably in O, Q, 0, 6, 8, 9) and a consistently oblique stance that creates strong directional movement across words. The faceting is applied broadly across uppercase, lowercase, and numerals, which helps maintain a cohesive voice at headline sizes and in short strings.