Sans Contrasted Fiho 5 is a very bold, wide, medium contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, packaging, headlines, logos, kids media, playful, chunky, friendly, retro, cartoon, attention grabbing, approachability, fun tone, retro appeal, display impact, rounded, soft corners, bouncy, bulky, high impact.
A heavy, rounded sans with an italic slant and broad, pillow-like strokes. The letterforms are compact and chunky, with softened corners, generous curves, and slightly uneven, hand-drawn-feeling contours that keep the texture lively. Counters are small to moderate and often rounded, while joins and terminals appear blunted rather than sharply cut, giving the alphabet a dense, poster-ready silhouette. The rhythm is energetic, with subtly varied widths and a buoyant baseline impression that reads more expressive than rigidly geometric.
Best suited to short-form display use such as posters, playful branding, packaging callouts, event flyers, and bold headline systems. It also fits entertainment and children-oriented contexts where a friendly, comedic voice is desired, and works well for wordmarks that benefit from a soft, chunky silhouette.
The font conveys a cheerful, informal tone with a distinctly playful, retro display flavor. Its soft, inflated shapes and emphatic weight feel friendly and comedic, leaning toward cartoon title energy rather than sober editorial neutrality.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum impact with a warm, approachable personality: a bold, rounded, slanted display sans that prioritizes charm and immediacy over strict typographic neutrality. Its slightly irregular rhythm suggests a deliberate move toward expressive, characterful lettering for attention-led applications.
The numerals match the same rounded, chunky construction and remain highly attention-grabbing at large sizes. In paragraph-like settings the density can build quickly, so it visually performs best when given room—either through larger leading or shorter line lengths—where its lively texture can read as intentional character rather than heaviness.