Sans Contrasted Timy 5 is a bold, normal width, high contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, sports branding, packaging, display ads, sporty, retro, urgent, dynamic, confident, impact, speed, attention, display, slanted, condensed feel, aerodynamic, sharp, angular.
A slanted, high-contrast sans with a forward-leaning posture and compact, speed-oriented proportions. Strokes show clear thick–thin modulation, with heavier verticals and tapered joins that create pointed terminals and crisp corners. Curves are tightened and slightly squarish, and counters stay fairly narrow, giving the letters a punchy, compact silhouette. The overall rhythm is lively and slightly irregular in width from glyph to glyph, which adds energy while keeping a consistent italic flow across caps, lowercase, and figures.
Best suited to short display settings where its slant and contrast can deliver impact—headlines, posters, event graphics, and sports or motorsport-style branding. It can also work for packaging or promotional layouts that benefit from a sense of speed and emphasis, especially at larger sizes where the tapered details remain clear.
The font projects motion and intensity, with a sporty, poster-ready attitude. Its sharp tapering and forward slant evoke speed and impact, reading as assertive and attention-seeking rather than quiet or neutral. The tone feels retro-leaning and performance-driven, suited to headlines that want to look fast and bold.
Designed to provide an energetic, forward-moving sans voice with pronounced contrast and sharp terminals for maximum visual punch. The construction suggests a focus on display readability and momentum, aiming for a streamlined, performance aesthetic that stands out in advertising and branding contexts.
Uppercase forms favor straight spines and angled cuts, while lowercase includes distinctive single-storey shapes and compact apertures that reinforce the condensed, streamlined feel. Numerals match the same slanted, tapered construction, keeping a cohesive texture in mixed alphanumeric settings.