Sans Contrasted Puta 1 is a very bold, normal width, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, packaging, signage, branding, industrial, poster, authoritative, retro, mechanical, impact, stencil effect, graphic texture, signage tone, retro display, stencil-like, modular, condensed feel, blocky, vertical stress.
A heavy, display-focused face with tall proportions, crisp edges, and strong vertical emphasis. Strokes are predominantly straight and rectangular, with pronounced contrast created by thick stems paired with hairline crossbars and fine interior bridges that produce a stencil-like segmentation in several glyphs. Counters are narrow and often vertically oriented, contributing to a compact, engineered rhythm, while terminals tend to be flat and squared. The lowercase follows the same modular logic, with single-storey forms and tightly controlled apertures; numerals are similarly bold and geometric with sharp joins and compact counters.
Best suited to headlines and short display lines where its segmented structure and contrast can be appreciated. It works well for posters, bold packaging, and signage systems that want an industrial or retro-mechanical voice, and it can add a forceful accent to branding when used sparingly.
The overall tone feels industrial and commanding, with a retro signage sensibility. Its rigid geometry and internal breaks add a mechanical, utilitarian flavor that reads as decisive and attention-grabbing rather than conversational.
The design appears intended as a high-impact display sans that borrows from stencil and wood-type-inspired construction, using internal breaks and hairline bridges to create a distinctive, engineered silhouette. It prioritizes bold presence and graphic texture over neutral, long-form readability.
The thin internal connectors and hairline horizontals create distinctive texture at larger sizes, but they also make spacing and letterfit feel tight and structured. The design’s signature breaks and narrow counters can visually darken in dense settings, producing a strong, graphic “wall of type” effect.