Sans Contrasted Kife 14 is a regular weight, normal width, very high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, branding, album covers, futuristic, techno, stylized, assertive, sleek, display impact, sci-fi tone, brand distinctiveness, graphic contrast, geometric, cut-in, modular, sharp, rounded.
This typeface is a high-contrast sans with geometric construction and deliberate cut-ins that create white “bites” through bowls and counters. Many letters combine smooth circular arcs with crisp, flat terminals, producing a modular, engineered feel. Curves are often interrupted by horizontal or diagonal trims (notably in C, G, S, O, and several numerals), while verticals and diagonals stay clean and decisive. The overall rhythm alternates between heavy, rounded masses and thin connector strokes, giving the set a sculpted, graphic look in both capitals and lowercase.
It is well suited to headlines, posters, packaging accents, and branding where a striking, contemporary silhouette is desirable. It can also work for short UI or product-name treatments in tech or entertainment contexts, but extended reading and small text sizes may be less comfortable due to the aggressive contrast and interrupted forms.
The design reads as modern and experimental, with a slightly retro-futurist tone reminiscent of sci‑fi titling and tech branding. Its sharp interruptions and bold interior shapes feel assertive and attention-grabbing, lending a crafted “display” personality rather than a neutral utility voice.
The font appears designed to merge clean sans geometry with dramatic, high-impact contrast and carved interior detailing. The intention seems to be creating a distinctive display face that signals modernity and design-forward styling while staying within a sans framework.
The distinctive internal cuts can reduce clarity at small sizes, especially where counters become narrow or partially closed. Spacing appears visually even in the sample text, but the strong within-glyph contrast and frequent cut-ins dominate the texture, making the font best treated as a statement style.