Sans Normal Valob 2 is a light, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, packaging, kids, craft branding, hand-drawn, quirky, playful, informal, friendly, handmade texture, friendly display, casual signage, approachable branding, monoline, rounded, sketchy, jittery, soft-cornered.
A monoline sans with rounded terminals and gently irregular contours that read as intentionally hand-drawn. Strokes stay even in thickness, but edges wobble slightly and show small kinks and bumps, creating a lively texture. Proportions are generally compact and open, with circular bowls and simple, geometric-like construction; counters remain clear even as outlines vary. The numerals and uppercase share the same loose rhythm, and the overall spacing feels airy with a light, unforced presence.
Best suited to display settings where a personable, hand-rendered texture is desirable: posters, headlines, packaging, and branding for crafts, cafés, or playful products. It can also work for short UI labels or pull quotes when a friendly tone is needed, but the irregular outlines suggest avoiding long-form text at small sizes where the jitter can reduce clarity.
The font conveys a casual, human tone—approachable, a bit mischievous, and deliberately imperfect. Its sketchy irregularity gives it personality and warmth, suggesting craft, doodling, or playful signage rather than polished corporate neutrality.
The design appears intended to mimic a neat marker or pen drawing within a clean sans framework, balancing legibility with an intentionally imperfect outline. It aims to add character and warmth to otherwise simple letterforms, giving designers an easy way to introduce a handmade feel without switching to a fully cursive script.
Round letters like O, Q, and G emphasize smooth arcs, while diagonals in K, V, W, X, and Y introduce slightly uneven joins that enhance the handmade effect. The dotted i/j and curved lowercase forms reinforce the friendly, informal voice, and the texture becomes more noticeable at larger sizes where the wobble reads as a stylistic feature.