Sans Contrasted Ento 7 is a very bold, narrow, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logotypes, packaging, signage, techno, industrial, retro, bold, modular, impact, futurism, compactness, character clarity, rounded corners, square forms, stencil-like, geometric, compact.
A compact, heavy sans with squared geometry and softened, rounded corners. Strokes are thick with occasional subtle thinning in joins and terminals, creating a lightly contrasted, cut-out feel rather than a purely monoline construction. Counters tend to be rectangular or pill-shaped, and many terminals end in flat, squared-off caps. Several glyphs incorporate notch-like gaps and clipped corners, producing a quasi-stencil rhythm and a slightly mechanical texture across words.
Best suited to large-scale uses where its chunky silhouettes and carved details can read cleanly—headlines, posters, branding marks, packaging panels, and environmental/signage-style applications. It can also work for UI labels or section headers when a strong, techy display voice is desired, but the tight apertures favor moderate-to-large sizes.
The overall tone feels assertive and engineered, with a retro-futurist/tech flavor. Its blocky shapes and punched counters suggest industrial signage and sci‑fi interface typography, reading as confident, utilitarian, and display-forward rather than conversational.
The design appears intended to deliver a compact, high-impact sans with a constructed, modular personality. The clipped corners, squared counters, and occasional stencil-like breaks seem aimed at improving character distinction while reinforcing an industrial, retro-tech visual theme.
The alphabet shows a consistent modular logic: squared bowls (B, P, R), a geometric, almost rectangular C/G family, and narrow apertures that emphasize a dense silhouette. The numeral set matches the same carved, squared aesthetic; the slashed zero stands out as a clarity feature.