Sans Contrasted Infi 7 is a regular weight, wide, very high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, logotypes, packaging, titles, art deco, glamorous, theatrical, modernist, geometric, display impact, deco revival, ornamental contrast, branding tone, bicolor, inline, stencil-like, sharp, monoline accents.
A stylized, geometric sans with dramatic thick–thin interplay created by alternating solid blocks and hairline strokes. Many letters combine a heavy vertical slab-like stem with a fine, continuous outline or inline that completes bowls and counters, producing a bicolor, cutout effect. Curves tend toward near-perfect semicircles, while diagonals (A, V, W, X, Y, Z) are sharp and angular, giving the design a crisp, constructed feel. Spacing and widths vary noticeably across the set, with compact forms in some letters and expansive, display-oriented shapes in others; overall texture reads as rhythmic and high-impact rather than even text color.
Best suited for large-size applications such as posters, headlines, film or event titles, and brand marks where the bold/inline construction can read clearly. It can add a premium, vintage-modern accent to packaging, menus, and signage, especially when given generous size and spacing.
The font projects a classic Art Deco mood—sleek, glamorous, and deliberately ornamental—while still reading as a sans through its simplified, geometric construction. The strong black shapes paired with delicate hairlines add a sense of luxury and theatricality, evoking posters, marquees, and vintage modernist titling.
The design appears intended as a statement display face that blends geometric sans structure with Art Deco-inspired contrast and inline detailing. Its goal is to deliver strong silhouette recognition and a luxurious, period-evocative character rather than neutral, continuous-text readability.
The thin connecting strokes and inline details become a defining feature in the sample text, where they create a shimmering, engraved look and emphasize the font’s decorative rhythm. Numerals follow the same split-weight logic, mixing bold verticals with fine circular segments for a cohesive, display-first impression.