Sans Normal Ebkek 3 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Gogh' by Type Forward (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: ui text, editorial, technical docs, labels, presentations, modern, clean, technical, neutral, efficient, everyday readability, oblique emphasis, modern utility, interface clarity, monoline, oblique, humanist, open apertures, wide spacing.
A monoline, oblique sans with smooth, rounded curves and clean terminals. The letterforms show a gently humanist construction—open bowls and apertures, soft joins, and straightforward geometry—while maintaining consistent stroke thickness across curved and straight segments. Uppercase forms are compact and simple, and the lowercase is clear and utilitarian with a single-storey a and g; overall spacing feels comfortable and slightly airy, supporting even texture in running text. Numerals follow the same restrained, round-ended logic, with familiar shapes and steady proportions that keep the rhythm uniform.
Well suited to user interfaces, product copy, and informational typography where a clean oblique emphasis is needed. It should perform comfortably in paragraphs, captions, and instructional or technical material, and it also works for labeling, dashboards, and presentation typography where a modern, unobtrusive voice is preferred.
The font reads as contemporary and matter-of-fact, with an understated slant that adds motion without becoming expressive or calligraphic. Its tone is professional and neutral, suggesting clarity, efficiency, and a modern interface sensibility rather than personality-led display styling.
The design appears intended as a practical italic companion for everyday communication: a streamlined sans that preserves clarity while adding a subtle forward motion. Its consistent stroke behavior and open forms suggest a focus on dependable readability and a contemporary, system-friendly look.
The italic angle is consistent across capitals, lowercase, and numerals, helping mixed-case settings feel cohesive. Curves remain smooth and unbroken, and the overall silhouette avoids sharp, aggressive diagonals, which keeps the texture calm and legible at typical reading sizes.