Sans Contrasted Yame 7 is a regular weight, wide, very high contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, sportswear, packaging, sporty, dynamic, retro, assertive, editorial, impact, speed, modernization, display, forward-leaning, condensed forms, ink-trap feel, angular, clean.
This typeface is a sharply slanted, high-contrast design with clean, mostly unadorned terminals and an overall sans-like construction. Strokes show pronounced modulation, pairing thick verticals with hairline horizontals and joins, which creates crisp internal counters and a lively texture in text. Proportions are on the wide side with a slightly squarish, engineered feel in round forms (notably in O/0-like shapes), and a generally tight, streamlined rhythm. Several letters include subtle tapered entries and occasional stroke breaks or cut-in details that read like ink-trap or speed-cut gestures, reinforcing a mechanical, performance-oriented look.
Best suited to large sizes where the extreme stroke modulation and sharp detailing can remain crisp—such as headlines, posters, campaign graphics, product packaging, and brand marks. It can work for short bursts of text (taglines, pull quotes) but reads as a display face first due to the intense contrast and energetic slant.
The font conveys speed and energy through its strong rightward slant and razor-thin contrasts, giving it a sporty, headline-driven personality. The sharp joins and slightly technical shaping add a retro-futurist tone—confident, promotional, and a bit dramatic—rather than quiet or bookish.
The design appears intended to deliver a fast, performance-forward voice with dramatic contrast and a sleek, modernized silhouette. Its wide stance, consistent italic rhythm, and technical cut-ins suggest a focus on impactful titling and branding where motion and sharpness are part of the message.
In the sample text, the texture alternates between bold dark strokes and very fine connecting elements, producing a striking, high-impact word image. Numerals follow the same contrast logic and display-oriented shaping, and the italic angle remains consistent across uppercase, lowercase, and figures.