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Contrast is the difference between the thick and thin parts of a letterform’s stroke, and creates the angle of stress within a type design. Monolinear typefaces have low stroke contrast, unlike high-contrast faces. A typical trait of a typeface with varying optical sizes is that display sizes have higher contrast than body sizes.

![“Through Thick & Thin”, with each word set in a drastically different typeface. Circles are used to highlight parts of the letterforms where contrast is evident.](images/thumbnail.svg)

Serif typefaces tend to have higher contrast strokes than sans serif designs.

Contrast can be controlled and fine-tuned in variable fonts with parametric axes that adjust thick strokes (XOPQ) and thin strokes (YOPQ) independently.