Sans Other Nenob 2 is a very bold, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, packaging, kids, comics, playful, quirky, friendly, chunky, comic, playfulness, approachability, informality, display impact, handmade feel, rounded, blobby, hand-drawn, irregular, bouncy.
A heavy, rounded sans with soft corners and subtly uneven contours that suggest hand-cut or marker-built shapes. Strokes are thick and uniform with low contrast, while counters tend to be compact and sometimes asymmetrical, creating a lumpy, organic silhouette. Proportions vary from glyph to glyph, with slightly wavering verticals and wide, cushioned curves that give the alphabet a bouncy rhythm. Terminals are blunt and smooth, and punctuation-like details (such as dots) appear large and sturdy for the weight.
Best suited to short, high-impact settings such as headlines, posters, stickers, and playful branding where a bold, friendly voice is needed. It also fits children’s materials and casual packaging that benefits from a handmade, cartoon sensibility. Use at medium-to-large sizes to preserve clarity in the small counters and dense forms.
The overall tone is cheerful and mischievous, with a cartoon-like bounce that feels informal and approachable. Its irregularity reads as intentional and lively rather than mechanical, lending a homemade, kid-friendly character. The heft and softness add warmth, while the quirky shapes keep it humorous and attention-grabbing.
The font appears designed to deliver a fun, approachable sans look with deliberate irregularity and soft geometry, prioritizing personality and visual punch. Its chunky construction and rounded edges suggest an intention to feel handcrafted and humorous while remaining broadly legible in display contexts.
The design emphasizes silhouette over fine detail, so letters remain recognizable through bold massing rather than precise geometry. The varied widths and slightly offbeat curves create strong personality in headlines, while the dense weight and tight inner spaces can make longer passages feel visually heavy at smaller sizes.