Sans Contrasted Afli 6 is a light, normal width, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, magazines, branding, posters, packaging, editorial, elegant, refined, contemporary, fashion, luxury tone, editorial voice, display clarity, modern classic, crisp, airy, calligraphic, modulated, sculpted.
This typeface is built from slim, modulated strokes with pronounced thick–thin transitions and sharp, clean terminals. Letterforms feel drawn with a controlled, slightly calligraphic hand: curves are smooth and generous, while joins stay precise and uncluttered. Proportions are relatively narrow with ample internal space, giving lines a light, open texture. Details like the delicate crossbar in A, the tapered diagonals in V/W/X/Y, and the compact, tidy bowls in b/p/q reinforce a refined, carefully balanced rhythm across caps and lowercase.
Best suited to display and short text settings where its contrast and fine details can remain crisp—such as magazine headlines, fashion or lifestyle branding, posters, and premium packaging. It can work for larger-size editorial pull quotes or section openers, especially with generous spacing and high-quality output.
The overall tone is polished and editorial, reading as quietly luxurious rather than loud. Its high-contrast modeling and restrained shapes suggest sophistication and taste, with a modern, gallery-like coolness that still nods to classic letterform traditions.
The font appears designed to deliver an elegant, high-end voice with strong typographic contrast and clean, contemporary structure. Its intention seems focused on stylish presentation—prioritizing silhouette, rhythm, and refined detailing for branding and editorial environments.
The design shows a consistent contrast logic across letters and figures, with round forms (O/Q/0/8/9) remaining smooth and stable while diagonals sharpen the silhouette. The Q’s tail is a distinctive, sweeping accent that adds character in display settings. Numerals appear slender and formal, matching the same crisp terminal treatment seen in the letters.