Sans Contrasted Obzu 2 is a regular weight, normal width, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, signage, logos, packaging, industrial, art deco, stern, vintage, architectural, display impact, period flavor, signage clarity, geometric styling, compact set, condensed feel, stencil-like, vertical stress, sharp terminals, monoline joins.
A tall, vertically oriented display face with narrow counters and emphatic straight stems, contrasted by rounded bowls and arched shoulders. Strokes show clear modulation, with thicker verticals and lighter connecting curves, creating a crisp, high-contrast rhythm. Terminals are mostly blunt and squared, and several forms use open apertures and interior cut-ins that produce a slightly stencil-like, segmented impression. Uppercase letters are especially columnar and geometric, while the lowercase keeps compact bowls and tight spacing that reads cleanly at larger sizes.
Best suited to headlines and short-form display settings where its condensed, high-contrast structure can read with impact. It works well for signage and branding applications that benefit from an architectural or industrial mood, and it can add a period-evocative flavor to packaging, titles, and editorial openers.
The overall tone feels industrial and architectural, with a strong Art Deco undercurrent. Its rigid verticality and clipped details lend a stern, utilitarian voice, while the smooth curves keep it refined rather than rough. The result is a vintage-modern hybrid that suggests signage, machinery labeling, and early-20th-century display typography.
The design appears intended as a compact, attention-getting display sans that blends geometric construction with deliberate cut-in details to create a distinctive, repeatable motif. Its strong vertical rhythm and controlled contrast prioritize presence and stylistic character over neutral text economy.
Distinctive features include the tall caps, narrow sidebearings, and recurring internal notches/cut-ins that unify the set across letters and figures. Numerals mirror the same condensed, upright stance, helping the font maintain a consistent texture in mixed alphanumeric settings.