Sans Contrasted Opmy 5 is a regular weight, normal width, very high contrast, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logotypes, packaging, editorial display, art deco, elegant, stylish, dramatic, retro, display impact, deco revival, luxury tone, stylized clarity, geometric, monolinear feel, hairline joins, sharp terminals, rounded bowls.
A high-contrast sans with a geometric foundation and frequent hairline connections into thicker vertical stems. Curves are drawn as clean, near-circular bowls with thin outer strokes, while many uprights read as solid, dark columns, creating a pronounced light–dark rhythm across words. Terminals are typically crisp and flat, with occasional pointed joins and tapered entry strokes that add a refined, engineered look. Proportions skew tall and open, with rounded counters and a consistent, smooth curve quality that keeps the design cohesive even as stroke weight shifts dramatically from glyph to glyph.
This face is best suited to display sizes where the extreme contrast and fine hairlines can be appreciated—headlines, titles, pull quotes, and branding. It can add a period-flavored, upscale feel to packaging and identity work, and works especially well when given generous spacing and clean reproduction.
The overall tone feels theatrical and sophisticated, echoing early modern display typography where contrast and geometry are used for glamour and impact. Its rhythm reads stylish and slightly formal, with a boutique, headline-forward personality rather than a utilitarian one.
The design appears intended to fuse sans-serif geometry with dramatic contrast, delivering a decorative, attention-grabbing voice while retaining a clean, modern outline structure. Its visual system prioritizes striking silhouette and rhythmic vertical emphasis for memorable word shapes.
Some letters emphasize asymmetrical weight placement—thin circular strokes paired with heavy vertical slabs—producing a distinctive, poster-like texture in lines of text. Numerals and capitals follow the same contrast logic, maintaining a cohesive family look across mixed-case settings.