Sans Normal Asbab 10 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Madani' and 'Madani Arabic' by NamelaType, 'Brahma' and 'Brahma Rounded' by Tall Chai, and 'Causten' and 'Causten Round' by Trustha (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: interface, branding, signage, editorial, data, clean, modern, neutral, friendly, technical, clarity, versatility, modernity, systematic, geometric, open apertures, round terminals, monoline, crisp.
This typeface presents a clean, monoline sans construction with a strongly geometric backbone and smooth circular curves. Stroke endings are predominantly blunt and unmodulated, producing a crisp, even rhythm across text. Round letters like O, C, and G feel near-circular, while straight-sided forms such as E, F, and L are built from simple, confident horizontals and verticals. Lowercase shapes stay compact and tidy with open counters, a single-storey “g,” and a clean, straight “t” with a short crossbar; numerals are straightforward and highly legible with open, modern forms.
It suits interface typography, dashboards, and product design where even color and quick recognition matter. The clean shapes also work well for contemporary branding and wayfinding, and the uncomplicated numerals support tables, metrics, and other data-forward layouts. In editorial settings it can serve as a neutral sans for headings and short-to-medium reading passages.
The overall tone is contemporary and matter-of-fact, with a friendly clarity that avoids sharp aggression. Its geometry and steady rhythm give it a practical, UI-ready feel, while the rounded curves keep it approachable and calm.
The design intention appears to be a versatile, modern workhorse sans: built from simple geometric primitives for consistency, with open counters and restrained details to keep readability high across a range of sizes and contexts.
Capitals read slightly more geometric and engineered than humanist, with consistent spacing and a restrained, systematic feel in the sample text. Diagonal-heavy letters (K, V, W, X, Y) look sturdy and well balanced, supporting clear display use without becoming stylistic.