Sans Contrasted Jisa 2 is a bold, very wide, very high contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, sports branding, headline, logotype, apparel, sporty, aggressive, retro, speedy, industrial, convey speed, maximize impact, create edge, brand emphasis, slanted, condensed caps, angular, chiseled, ink-trap like.
A slanted, heavy display sans with strongly sheared curves and wedge-like terminals that create a sharp, aerodynamic silhouette. Strokes show pronounced thick–thin modulation, with thin hairline diagonals appearing as cuts or “slashes” in several glyphs and thicker main strokes forming compact, blocky counters. The shapes lean on squared bowls and flattened joins, with occasional notch-like details that resemble ink-trap openings or stencil cuts, giving the forms a machined, high-impact rhythm. Numerals and capitals read especially poster-forward, with tight internal spaces and crisp edges that emphasize momentum.
Best suited to short, high-impact settings such as posters, sports and esports branding, event titles, product marks, packaging callouts, and apparel graphics. It can also work for punchy subheads where a kinetic, engineered look is desired, but it is less suited to long-form reading due to its dense counters and pronounced cuts.
The overall tone is fast, assertive, and performance-driven—suggesting speed, competition, and a slightly retro motorsport sensibility. Its sharp cuts and forward slant add urgency, while the heavy massing keeps the voice loud and confident for attention-grabbing headlines.
The font appears designed to communicate motion and power through a forward lean, sharp terminal treatment, and dramatic internal cutaways. Its contrasting strokes and sculpted shapes aim for a distinctive display identity that stands out in branding and promotional typography.
The design’s distinctive cut-ins and hairline diagonals become more noticeable in running text, where they add texture and a technical feel; at smaller sizes these details may visually merge in the densest letters. Uppercase has a particularly strong, emblem-like presence, while lowercase remains compact and stylized to match the same slanted, chiseled logic.