Sans Contrasted Mahi 2 is a light, wide, medium contrast, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: logotypes, headlines, posters, ui display, tech branding, futuristic, technical, digital, industrial, sci‑fi, tech aesthetic, systematic forms, display clarity, geometric branding, angular, octagonal, modular, monolinear, geometric.
A geometric, angular sans with an octagonal construction and crisp, chamfered corners throughout. Strokes are predominantly uniform but with selective thickening on horizontals and terminals, creating a subtle, engineered contrast. Counters are mostly rectangular with softened (clipped) corners, and many joins resolve as sharp elbows rather than curves, giving the design a modular, grid-built feel. Lowercase forms remain structured and open, with a single-storey ‘a’ and squared bowls; figures and capitals share the same hard-edged geometry for a cohesive set.
Best suited to titles, wordmarks, packaging, and interface/display typography where an engineered, futuristic voice is desired. It can work well for tech branding, game titles, and product naming, and is most convincing at sizes that preserve the angular corner cuts and rectilinear counters.
The overall tone reads tech-forward and utilitarian, evoking digital interfaces, sci‑fi labeling, and machine-made signage. Its sharp corners and regimented rhythm communicate precision and control more than warmth or informality.
The design appears intended to translate a grid-and-chamfer construction into a readable sans, balancing modular geometry with enough differentiation for continuous text lines. Its consistent octagonal motif suggests a deliberate goal of creating a system-like, techno aesthetic that remains orderly across letters and numerals.
The sample text shows strong consistency across mixed-case lines, with distinctive angled terminals that help differentiate similar shapes (notably diagonals and boxed counters). The squared punctuation and compact interior spaces emphasize a display-oriented, schematic look, especially at larger sizes where the chamfered details are most apparent.