Sans Contrasted Kidy 6 is a regular weight, wide, very high contrast, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logotypes, posters, packaging, album covers, futuristic, art deco, techno, sleek, experimental, display impact, retro futurism, stylized branding, graphic texture, geometric, modular, striped, cutout, stencil-like.
A geometric, display-oriented sans with extreme contrast created by alternating solid strokes and thin hairline connectors. Many letters use sliced counters and horizontal bands, giving rounded forms (like O/C/e) an “eclipsed” look while verticals sometimes reduce to fine stems. Curves are largely circular and bowls are cleanly drawn, paired with sharp joins and occasional pointed terminals in letters like V/W/Y. The overall texture is high-impact and rhythmic, with generous widths and a built-from-shapes, modular consistency across caps, lowercase, and numerals.
Best suited to large-scale display use such as headlines, posters, and short punchy phrases where the striped construction can be appreciated. It can also work well for logos, packaging, and entertainment or tech-forward branding where a stylized, retro-futurist voice is desired.
The sliced, banded construction reads as futuristic and Art Deco–inspired, with a sci‑fi instrument-panel feel. Its crisp geometry and dramatic light–dark interplay give it a confident, engineered tone that feels more like branding than text typography.
The design appears intended to reinterpret a clean geometric sans through a high-contrast, cutout system that produces a signature “banded” silhouette. The goal is distinctive impact and a consistent, modular visual motif rather than neutral long-form readability.
The strong internal striping and intermittent hairlines create distinctive word shapes but also introduce delicate features that can visually fade at smaller sizes. Numerals and round letters carry the style especially clearly, with prominent horizontal cutouts and large, smooth curves.