Sans Normal Opked 5 is a bold, wide, medium contrast, upright, tall x-height font visually similar to 'Cosmos' by Berthold, 'Big Vesta' and 'Dialog' by Linotype, 'Cora' by TypeTogether, 'Petala Pro' by Typefolio, and 'Conglomerate' by Typetanic Fonts (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, packaging, signage, friendly, retro, punchy, approachable, confident, impact, approachability, display legibility, brand voice, rounded, soft-cornered, bulky, compact, high-impact.
A heavy, rounded sans with soft corners and generously filled counters that create a sturdy, high-ink silhouette. Curves are smooth and slightly squarish in places, giving round letters a controlled, not-too-geometric feel. Strokes stay broadly consistent but show subtle shaping at joins and terminals, producing a lively rhythm rather than a rigidly uniform build. Proportions favor broad bowls and a prominent x-height, keeping lowercase forms large and legible while maintaining a dense, headline-oriented texture.
Best suited to headlines and short-to-medium display copy where its dense weight and rounded shapes can deliver impact. It works well for branding and packaging that want a friendly, sturdy voice, and for signage or promotional graphics where quick recognition is key. For long paragraphs, it’s likely strongest when used sparingly as a typographic accent.
The overall tone is bold but friendly—confident without feeling harsh. Its rounded shaping and compact internal spaces evoke a mildly retro, display-driven personality suited to attention-grabbing messaging that still reads as approachable.
Designed to provide a high-impact sans with softened geometry, balancing assertiveness with warmth. The large lowercase presence and rounded construction suggest an emphasis on legibility and approachability in display settings.
The numerals and capitals read as solid and sign-like, with broad curves and stable verticals that hold up well at large sizes. In text, the heavy color builds a strong typographic voice, so spacing and line length will matter to avoid an overly dark block.