Sans Contrasted Isja 10 is a bold, very wide, very high contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: sports branding, headlines, posters, logos, gaming ui, sporty, aggressive, futuristic, dynamic, techy, speed emphasis, impact display, brand distinctiveness, tech aesthetic, slanted, compressed curves, sheared terminals, ink-trap feel, angular cuts.
A heavy, right-slanted display sans with sharply sheared terminals and wedge-like cut-ins that create a fast, aerodynamic silhouette. Forms are predominantly wide with rounded outer contours, but the counters and joins show crisp, angular carving that produces strong internal contrast and a “scooped” look. Stroke endings often taper into pointed or clipped shapes, and several letters incorporate thin hairline diagonals that extend slightly beyond the main strokes, adding a technical, blade-like accent. Overall rhythm is dense and forward-leaning, with sturdy vertical mass balanced by sharp internal notches and flattened curves.
Best suited for attention-grabbing headlines, sports or motorsport identity systems, esports and gaming graphics, and bold promotional posters where its speed-driven styling can lead the composition. It can also work for short UI labels or product marks in tech and performance contexts when used at sizes that preserve the sharp internal cuts.
The typeface projects speed, impact, and a competitive, high-energy attitude. Its slanted stance and cut, sharpened details evoke performance branding and futuristic machinery, reading as confident and forceful rather than neutral or understated.
The design appears intended to combine a broad, powerful footprint with high-velocity motion cues, using slant, sheared terminals, and angular cut-ins to suggest speed and precision. Its styling prioritizes distinctive, logo-ready letterforms and dramatic display impact over quiet, continuous reading.
In text, the strong slant and carved apertures create an animated texture with pronounced directional flow. The hairline diagonal accents on select glyphs become noticeable at larger sizes, where they read as deliberate styling cues; at smaller sizes they may function more as subtle edge highlights than structural strokes. Numerals follow the same cut-and-sweep logic, with bold silhouettes and sharp internal shaping for a cohesive headline set.