Sans Contrasted Gegy 3 is a very bold, very wide, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, logos, packaging, comics, playful, chunky, quirky, cartoonish, rowdy, display impact, handmade feel, playful branding, novelty texture, angular, chiseled, irregular, blocky, wedge-cut.
A heavy, block-built sans with chiseled, irregular contours and subtly uneven geometry. Strokes are broad and confident, with noticeable shaping differences between verticals, horizontals, and diagonals that create a carved, cut-paper feel rather than a purely geometric build. Corners are often beveled or faceted, counters are compact, and many curves resolve into angled segments, giving rounds (like O/Q) a polygonal, slightly squashed look. Spacing reads on the tight side and the overall rhythm is bouncy, with small inconsistencies in terminals and joins that feel intentionally handcrafted.
Best suited to short, high-impact applications such as posters, headlines, branding marks, packaging callouts, and playful signage where bold silhouettes do the work. It can also support comic or game-adjacent titling and energetic social graphics, but is less appropriate for long reading or small UI text due to its dense counters and busy edge texture.
The tone is loud and humorous, leaning toward comic signage and novelty display rather than sober editorial typography. Its rough-hewn facets and chunky proportions suggest a playful, mischievous energy—more “hand-cut” than “machine-set.”
The design appears intended as an attention-grabbing display face that mimics hand-carved or cut-out lettering. Its faceted curves, compact counters, and deliberately uneven terminals aim to inject personality and motion into large type, trading strict consistency for character and punch.
Distinctive, simplified shapes (notably in the rounded letters and numerals) prioritize silhouette over internal detail, which boosts impact at larger sizes but can make small counters fill in at reduced scale. The design’s irregular cuts create a lively texture in words, especially in mixed-case settings.