Sans Normal Bileg 7 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Malva' by Harbor Type, 'Qubo' by Hoftype, 'Calima' by JCFonts, and 'Latina' by Latinotype (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: packaging, posters, children’s, branding, headlines, friendly, playful, informal, soft, humanized sans, approachability, casual readability, warm branding, rounded, bouncy, quirky, hand-drawn, slightly irregular.
A rounded sans with gently irregular, hand-drawn contours and low-contrast strokes. Curves are soft and full, with subtly uneven terminals that give letters a lively, organic edge rather than a rigid geometric finish. Proportions feel open and readable, with generous counters and a steady, upright stance; the overall rhythm is slightly bouncy, showing small variations in width and curvature across glyphs. Numerals and capitals match the same softened construction, keeping the texture consistent in both display and text settings.
Well-suited to packaging, casual branding, posters, and headlines where a friendly, human voice is desired. It can also work for short-to-medium UI or editorial snippets when a softer, less formal tone is appropriate, while keeping good legibility at moderate sizes.
The font communicates a warm, approachable tone with a casual, human feel. Its slight wobble and rounded shapes suggest friendliness and playfulness without becoming overly decorative, making it feel conversational and easygoing.
Likely designed to provide a clean sans foundation with a deliberately humanized finish—combining straightforward letterforms with subtle irregularities to avoid a sterile, purely geometric feel. The goal appears to be an approachable everyday typeface that stays readable while adding personality.
Diagonal strokes (as in A, V, W, X) retain a soft, rounded presence, and circular forms (O, Q, 0, 8, 9) are smooth and roomy. The lowercase includes simple, single-storey-style forms where expected and maintains clear differentiation between similar shapes, supporting comfortable scanning in longer lines.