Sans Contrasted Tylu 7 is a regular weight, normal width, very high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, editorial, magazines, branding, posters, elegant, fashion, refined, dramatic, editorial polish, luxury tone, modern elegance, display impact, high-contrast, crisp, sharp, calligraphic, rational.
A high-contrast, upright design with crisp, sharply tapered terminals and a pronounced interplay between hairlines and heavy strokes. Curves are smooth and controlled, while joins and ends often resolve into fine points, giving the silhouettes a sleek, cut-paper precision. Proportions lean classic with open counters and clear differentiation between forms; the lowercase maintains a steady x-height with tidy bowls and relatively narrow apertures. Overall rhythm alternates between thick vertical emphasis and delicate cross-strokes, producing a polished, print-forward texture in text.
Best suited for headlines, subheads, pull quotes, and magazine-style editorial composition where contrast and sharp terminals can be appreciated. It also fits branding and packaging that aims for a premium, contemporary feel, and works well in poster typography and refined digital hero text when rendered at comfortable sizes.
The font projects a poised, upscale tone—clean and modern in its restraint, yet dramatic through contrast and sharp detailing. It reads as confident and curated, with a fashion/editorial sensibility that feels at home in premium branding and sophisticated layouts.
The design appears intended to merge a contemporary, clean structure with fashion-leaning high contrast, delivering crisp letterforms that feel luxurious without relying on overt ornament. Its detailing emphasizes precision and elegance, aiming to create impact through stroke modulation and sharp finishing rather than decorative additions.
In the sample text, the strong contrast produces a lively sparkle at display sizes, while the very thin strokes become a defining visual feature that benefits from generous spacing and solid reproduction. Numerals mirror the same sharp, high-contrast logic, with smooth curves and fine terminals that keep them consistent with the letterforms.