Sans Contrasted Puhi 5 is a very bold, normal width, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Monterra' by ActiveSphere (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, packaging, magazine, dramatic, editorial, theatrical, retro, attention, impact, poster texture, stylization, stencil-like, flared, ink-trap.
A very heavy, upright display face with sharply carved internal cut-ins that create a stencil-like, high-contrast rhythm. Strokes are predominantly vertical and blocky, with thin hairline joints and tapered joins that read as deliberate notches rather than soft modulation. Counters are compact and often interrupted by vertical slits or bite-shaped apertures, giving many letters a segmented, poster-cut silhouette. Uppercase forms are tall and imposing, while the lowercase keeps a sturdy, compact structure with distinctive, sculpted terminals and a single-storey a.
Best suited to large-size typography where the carved details can be appreciated: headlines, poster work, logotypes, packaging, and editorial display. It can also add a strong voice to short subheads or pull quotes, but its dense texture is less appropriate for extended small-size reading.
The overall tone is bold and performative, with a sense of spectacle and tension created by the repeated cuts and narrow highlights. It evokes vintage poster lettering and attention-grabbing headlines, balancing elegance with an industrial, stamped character.
The design intent appears to be a statement display font that stays legible through extreme weight by introducing consistent internal cut-ins and tapered joints. This approach creates contrast and separation within the black mass, delivering a distinctive, repeatable texture for impactful typographic compositions.
Spacing appears intentionally tight and massy, with the internal cut-ins doing much of the work to keep shapes distinguishable at large sizes. Numerals follow the same carved treatment, producing a cohesive, sign-like texture across mixed text.