Sans Contrasted Hawe 5 is a very bold, very wide, high contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: sports branding, racing graphics, headlines, posters, packaging, sporty, futuristic, energetic, aggressive, dynamic, speed, impact, modernity, branding, display, oblique, slanted, compressed counters, rounded corners, extended.
A heavy, right-slanted sans with pronounced width and a streamlined, aerodynamic build. Strokes show clear contrast, with thick horizontals and broader curves balanced by tighter joins and thinner connecting sections, creating a sculpted, fast-moving rhythm. Terminals are mostly squared with subtly rounded edges, and many forms feel slightly “cut” or sheared, reinforcing a forward-leaning, engineered look. Counters are compact and somewhat pinched in letters like a/e/s, while wide bowls and long horizontals keep the overall footprint expansive and assertive.
Best used for large-scale display applications where its width, slant, and contrast can create instant momentum—sports identities, motorsport or automotive graphics, tech-forward campaigns, and bold poster headlines. It can also work for packaging and promotional materials that need a loud, energetic typographic voice, especially in short phrases or logotype-like settings.
The tone is bold and kinetic, projecting speed and impact. Its oblique stance and sharp, engineered shapes suggest performance, technology, and competition, with a confident, almost aggressive presence suited to attention-grabbing messaging.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum impact with a sense of speed: a wide, oblique display sans that blends industrial sharpness with smooth curves for a modern performance aesthetic. Its contrast and sheared terminals help create a distinctive silhouette that stays consistent across caps, lowercase, and figures.
Capitals read as especially expansive, with strong horizontal emphasis in E/F/T/Z and broad, open shapes in C/G/O. Lowercase maintains the same forward motion; dots and small details are sturdy and integrated, and numerals follow the same wide, slanted, high-impact construction for consistent display color.