Sans Contrasted Wagi 6 is a very bold, normal width, medium contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, sports branding, packaging, event promos, sporty, dynamic, retro, assertive, playful, impact, motion, display, attention, branding, slanted, swashy, curvy, chunky, brash.
A heavy, right-slanted sans with sculpted, calligraphic modulation and prominent tapering at terminals. Strokes feel brush-like, with rounded shoulders and wedgey endings that create sharp, energetic corners despite the overall softness of curves. Counters are fairly compact and the forms lean on broad, simplified geometry—strong bowls, open apertures, and occasional exaggerated entry/exit strokes that add momentum. Overall spacing reads a touch tight in text, reinforcing a dense, punchy color.
Best suited for short, high-impact settings such as posters, big headlines, sports or team-style branding, packaging callouts, and event promotion. It works well where a bold, kinetic voice is needed and where letterforms can be given room to breathe at larger sizes. In dense paragraphs or small UI text, the heavy weight and stylized terminals may feel busy.
The tone is energetic and extroverted, with a sporty, poster-driven feel. Its slant and tapered terminals suggest speed and impact, while the rounded curves and slightly cheeky shapes keep it approachable rather than severe. The overall impression is retro-leaning and promotional, designed to grab attention quickly.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum emphasis with a sense of motion—combining a sans foundation with brush-like modulation and tapered endings to create a distinctive, display-first personality. It prioritizes punchy silhouettes and a fast, italic rhythm over quiet neutrality.
Uppercase shapes show simplified, display-oriented construction with noticeable stylization in letters like J, Q, and S, while lowercase maintains a lively rhythm through angled joins and flared terminals. Numerals are similarly bold and curvy, with clear, graphic silhouettes suited to large sizes. The font’s texture is intentionally uneven in a “drawn” way, creating character but reducing neutrality for long-form reading.