Sans Contrasted Inha 2 is a bold, normal width, very high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, logotypes, packaging, title cards, art deco, theatrical, vintage, stylized, architectural, deco revival, display impact, brand signature, signage feel, geometric, inline cuts, stencil-like, monoline spines, sharp joins.
A stylized geometric sans built from bold, blocky strokes and razor-thin internal cuts that read like inlines or stencil slits. Many glyphs pair a dominant solid mass with a narrow vertical or curved hairline that slices through counters and bowls, creating pronounced light–dark rhythm. Construction leans on simple circles and straight stems, with occasional angled diagonals (notably in V/W/X/Z) and crisp terminals; curves are smooth and symmetrical, while joins stay sharp and graphic. Proportions vary by letter, with wide rounds (O/Q/C) contrasted against compact, columnar forms (I/E/F/H), giving the line a lively, poster-oriented texture.
Best suited for display typography such as posters, event titles, film or theater-style title cards, and bold branding moments. It can also work for short packaging statements and logo wordmarks where the distinctive inline cuts can be used as a signature detail. For longer passages, it will be most effective at larger sizes where the fine internal cuts remain clear.
The overall tone is distinctly Art Deco and showcard-like—glamorous, cinematic, and slightly mysterious. The high-contrast cut-ins and split counters create a sense of spotlighting and stage lighting, lending the face a dramatic, vintage-modern confidence rather than a neutral utility feel.
The design appears intended to reinterpret classic Deco signage tropes—geometric bases, strong vertical strokes, and decorative inlines—into a cohesive, high-impact display alphabet. Its goal is to deliver instant personality and period flavor while keeping letter construction clean and systematic.
The internal slits often become a defining feature of each character, so letterforms remain recognizable but highly decorated; this can emphasize word shapes and rhythm in display settings. The design’s strong verticality and repeating inline motif help unify mixed-case text, while the more expressive diagonals in A/N/V/W/X/Z add dynamism in headlines.