Sans Contrasted Faba 7 is a bold, wide, high contrast, italic, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Milgran' by Kulokale (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, packaging, branding, sportswear, sporty, retro, confident, energetic, advertising, impact, motion, display, personality, retro tone, oblique, swashy, flared, dynamic, rounded.
A heavy, right-slanted display face with pronounced stroke modulation and flared terminals that create a lively, brush-like rhythm. Counters are compact and the overall silhouettes are broad, with generous curves and slightly softened corners that keep the forms friendly rather than rigid. The capitals read as sturdy and poster-oriented, while the lowercase introduces more calligraphic gestures and a few distinctive, swash-like shapes that add motion across words. Numerals are similarly weighty and expressive, matching the italic flow and maintaining clear, bold silhouettes at large sizes.
Best suited for headlines, posters, and short, high-impact copy where its bold slant and contrasted strokes can carry the layout. It can work well for branding and packaging that want a retro-energetic voice, and for sports- or nightlife-adjacent graphics where motion and punch are desirable. For longer passages, it’s likely most effective as a display accent rather than body text.
The font conveys a confident, high-energy tone with a vintage advertising flavor. Its slanted stance and dramatic thick–thin contrast feel expressive and fast, leaning toward sporty and headline-driven communication rather than quiet neutrality.
The design appears intended to deliver an assertive, motion-forward display style that combines sans-like construction with expressive, italicized stroke behavior. Its goal seems to be immediate visual impact and a distinctive, vintage-leaning personality for promotional and branding contexts.
In running text, the strong modulation and flaring terminals create a noticeable texture, with individual letters contributing personality and momentum. The design’s emphasis on gesture and width suggests it will benefit from ample tracking and larger settings where the shapes and contrast can remain crisp.