Sans Contrasted Infi 3 is a regular weight, normal width, very high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, titles, branding, packaging, art deco, glamorous, theatrical, refined, retro, deco revival, display impact, geometric styling, luxury tone, inline, monoline hairlines, geometric, angular, ornamental.
A high-contrast display sans with dramatic alternation between solid vertical blocks and extremely thin hairlines. Many letters are built from simplified, geometric primitives—half-discs, vertical stems, and sharp diagonals—often accented by inline-style cuts or narrow interior slits that create a layered, poster-like texture. Curves tend to be clean and circular, while diagonals in letters like V, W, X, and Z are crisp and steep, producing a faceted rhythm. The overall spacing and proportions feel intentionally stylized rather than purely utilitarian, with distinctive, sometimes asymmetric constructions across the set.
Best suited for headlines, titling, and short text in posters, signage, editorial display, and brand marks where its geometric contrast can read clearly. It can add a vintage-luxe accent to packaging and event materials, especially when set with ample size and breathing room.
The font projects a strong Art Deco sensibility: sleek, luxe, and stage-ready. Its stark black-and-hairline contrast gives it a dramatic, nightlife tone—equal parts elegant and attention-grabbing—suggesting classic cinema titles, jazz-age signage, and fashion-era sophistication.
The likely intention is to reinterpret Deco-era geometric letterforms in a modern, high-contrast display system, using bold vertical masses and hairline connectors to maximize visual drama and recognizable silhouette. The consistent use of inline cuts and split strokes suggests a focus on decorative impact and period flavor over neutral text performance.
The design relies heavily on vertical emphasis and bold/line interplay, which makes it visually striking at larger sizes but potentially delicate in fine details at small sizes. Numerals and capitals maintain the same graphic logic, reinforcing a cohesive, poster-centric character.