Sans Contrasted Kime 16 is a bold, wide, very high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, packaging, album art, futuristic, techno, sci‑fi, industrial, digital, sci‑fi display, tech branding, interface aesthetic, graphic impact, rounded corners, stencil-like, segmented, extended, modular.
A geometric sans with a modular, segmented construction and pronounced thick–thin interplay. Heavy horizontal strokes and rounded-rectangle bowls are paired with extremely thin vertical connectors, creating a deliberately engineered, stencil-like rhythm. Counters are often expressed as narrow horizontal slots, and many joins resolve into squared terminals with softened corners, giving the forms a sleek, machined feel. Proportions lean extended, with compact apertures and a consistent, grid-minded spacing that emphasizes horizontal movement across a line.
Best suited to display settings where its segmented structure and high contrast can be appreciated—headlines, posters, logos/wordmarks, product branding, packaging, and entertainment or tech-forward graphics. It can also work for short UI labels or screen-inspired treatments when used at sufficiently large sizes to preserve the hairline details.
The overall tone is futuristic and technological, evoking control panels, arcade interfaces, and sci‑fi titling. Its sliced counters and hairline connectors read as digital and industrial, lending an assertive, synthetic voice that feels designed rather than handwritten or humanist.
The design appears intended to fuse a clean geometric sans base with a constructed, panel-like stencil logic, prioritizing a distinctive sci‑fi silhouette and strong horizontal emphasis. The exaggerated thick–thin contrast and slot counters suggest a goal of high-impact titling with a futuristic, machine-made personality.
In smaller sizes the thin verticals and narrow slots can visually break up, while at larger sizes the distinctive segmentation becomes a defining graphic feature. The numerals and capitals carry the strongest display presence, and the angular moments (notably in V/W and some diagonals) add extra edge against the otherwise rounded geometry.