Sans Contrasted Jaze 3 is a very bold, very wide, very high contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: sports branding, racing graphics, gaming titles, tech posters, event promos, futuristic, aggressive, sporty, techno, racing, speed emphasis, tech styling, impact display, mechanical feel, brand presence, angular, slanted, geometric, compressed counters, ink-trap cuts.
A sharply slanted, geometric sans with heavy, blocky forms and pronounced internal cut-ins that create a segmented, engineered look. Strokes are built from straight runs and hard corners, with oblique terminals and frequent notches that act like ink-trap-style openings and speed-line accents. Counters are compact and often rectangular, while the overall rhythm is forward-leaning and tightly spaced in feel, emphasizing motion and impact. Numerals and capitals share the same wedge-like construction, keeping the texture consistent across lines of text.
Best suited to display settings where impact and motion are desirable—sports identities, racing-themed graphics, esports and game titles, tech event posters, and energetic promotional materials. It also works well for short UI labels or product marks when the goal is a bold, performance-oriented aesthetic rather than long-form readability.
The font conveys speed and force, blending motorsport and sci-fi cues into a punchy, competitive tone. Its sharp angles and sliced details feel tactical and mechanical, producing an assertive, high-energy voice suited to attention-grabbing headlines.
Designed to project speed and modernity through an oblique stance, angular geometry, and deliberate stroke cut-outs that add visual dynamism. The consistent system of notches and squared counters suggests an intention to feel engineered and futuristic while remaining recognizable as a sans display face.
Distinctive horizontal breaks and stepped terminals are especially evident in characters like E, S, Z and several numerals, which reinforces a techno-industrial theme. The diagonals and notch patterns unify the set, but the dense interior shapes mean it reads best when given room (larger sizes or looser tracking).