Sans Contrasted Enhe 2 is a bold, normal width, medium contrast, italic, tall x-height font.
Keywords: posters, packaging, social media, headlines, signage, friendly, playful, casual, energetic, approachable, handwritten feel, approachability, high impact, informal branding, display legibility, rounded, brushed, slanted, soft terminals, lively rhythm.
A slanted, rounded sans with a brush-like construction and smooth, swollen strokes. Letterforms lean forward with generous curves, soft terminals, and subtly irregular widths that create an informal handwritten rhythm while remaining legible. Counters are open and oval, curves are prominent (notably in O/C/G), and joins tend to be fluid with occasional tapering that suggests a marker or brush tool rather than rigid geometry. Numerals and capitals keep the same buoyant, slightly bouncy baseline feel, giving the set a consistent, animated texture.
Best suited for short-form display use such as posters, packaging callouts, social media graphics, and brand accents where a friendly, energetic voice is desired. It can work for signage and large headlines, especially when you want an informal, handwritten feel with clear letter shapes.
The overall tone is upbeat and personable, reading as conversational and optimistic rather than technical or corporate. Its lively slant and rounded shapes give it a warm, youthful character that feels at home in friendly branding and informal messaging.
Likely designed to capture the look of a bold, italic hand-drawn marker style while keeping a clean sans structure for readability. The intent appears to balance expressiveness (brush rhythm, rounded terminals, lively slant) with consistent proportions across the character set for dependable display typography.
The forms prioritize smooth motion and gesture: diagonals and curves feel drawn in one pass, with gentle modulation at turns and joins. Spacing and width variation add to the handcrafted impression, and the strong black presence makes it effective at larger sizes where the brushy details are most visible.