Sans Contrasted Jiti 1 is a bold, very wide, very high contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, logotypes, sportswear, futuristic, aggressive, techno, speedy, industrial, impact, speed, futurism, experimentation, texture, angular, sliced, compressed, edgy, kinetic.
A sharply slanted display sans built from heavy, wedge-like strokes and crisp, angular terminals. Many forms are constructed with deliberate cut-ins and horizontal slice gaps that segment bowls and counters, producing a stenciled, modular feel. Contrast is expressed through abrupt transitions between thick blocks and hairline joins, with occasional thin diagonal incisions that read like blade cuts. The rhythm is energetic and uneven by design, with compact apertures, squared-off curves, and a tightly packed, forward-leaning silhouette that stays consistent across uppercase, lowercase, and figures.
Best suited to short, high-impact settings such as headlines, event posters, album/track art, product branding, and stylized logotypes. It also fits tech, gaming, and motorsport-inspired graphics where motion and edge are desired. Use with generous size and careful tracking to let the sliced forms read clearly.
The overall tone is fast, hard-edged, and machine-driven—suggesting motion, impact, and engineered precision. The sliced detailing evokes sci‑fi interfaces, motorsport graphics, and cyberpunk branding, giving text a charged, confrontational presence. It feels contemporary and experimental rather than neutral or bookish.
The design appears aimed at delivering a dynamic, futuristic display voice by combining a steep italic construction with segmented strokes and razor-thin cut lines. Its consistent use of breaks and sharp terminals suggests an intention to create memorable silhouettes and a strong graphic texture in branding and title use.
At larger sizes the internal breaks and micro-strokes become a key stylistic feature, creating strong texture and a distinctive "segmented" word shape. In longer lines, the repeated horizontal cuts and sharp diagonals can dominate the page color, so spacing and size will strongly affect legibility.