Sans Contrasted Okkoz 5 is a bold, normal width, medium contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, branding, sportswear, posters, packaging, sporty, retro, dynamic, techy, futuristic, convey motion, modernize, display impact, brand voice, oblique, rounded, geometric, ink-trap-like, wide apertures.
A slanted sans with a smooth, geometric backbone and rounded bowls, rendered with clearly modulated strokes. Curves tend to be broad and open, while joins and terminals often resolve into crisp, angled cuts that create wedge-like endings and occasional ink-trap-like notches. Counters are generous (notably in C, O, e), and the overall rhythm feels fast and slightly condensed by the forward lean despite generally steady proportions. Numerals follow the same oblique construction with clean, simplified forms and strong silhouette clarity.
Best suited to headlines, logos, and branded messaging where slant and sharp terminals can convey motion and modernity. It works well for sports, automotive, tech-forward packaging, and poster typography, and can also serve as a distinctive accent face for UI or editorial callouts when used at larger sizes.
The tone is energetic and contemporary with a distinct late-20th-century sport/tech flavor. Its forward slant and sharp terminal cuts suggest speed and motion, while the rounded geometry keeps it approachable rather than aggressive. Overall it reads as confident, streamlined, and display-oriented.
The design appears intended to deliver a sense of speed and modern refinement by combining rounded, geometric counters with sharply cut terminals and a consistent oblique stance. Its forms prioritize bold silhouettes and quick recognition, suggesting a focus on display impact and brand character over neutral text color.
Uppercase forms emphasize simple, iconic shapes (round O, open C/G) paired with angled, engineered terminals. Lowercase maintains a single-storey a and g with smooth, rounded construction; the e features a prominent horizontal bar and open counter that boosts legibility at larger sizes. The design’s most characteristic signature is the contrast between soft curves and knife-like cuts at terminals and cross-strokes, which becomes especially noticeable in words and short headlines.