Sans Normal Adnog 20 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Ricardo' by Bureau Roffa; 'Aspira', 'Innova', and 'Neutro' by Durotype; 'Cyntho Next' by Mint Type; and 'Daikon' by Pepper Type (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: ui labels, dashboards, infographics, editorial, captions, modern, neutral, friendly, efficient, technical, emphasis, clarity, versatility, modern tone, oblique, clean, rounded, open, smooth.
This is a clean oblique sans with smooth, rounded curves and a consistent, low-contrast stroke. Uppercase forms are straightforward and slightly wide in feel, with open apertures and uncluttered joins that keep counters clear. The lowercase has a simple single-storey ‘a’ and ‘g’ and a crisp, utilitarian construction overall, while the numerals follow the same rounded, even rhythm for coherent text and UI use.
It suits interface labels, product UI, and dashboard text where an oblique style is needed without sacrificing clarity. It also works well for infographics, captions, and editorial callouts, providing a contemporary emphasis for short passages and headings while remaining readable in multi-line settings.
The overall tone is modern and neutral, leaning practical rather than expressive. Its slanted posture adds a sense of motion and informality, while the restrained shapes keep it credible for technical and editorial settings. The result feels friendly and efficient without becoming playful.
The design appears intended as a general-purpose oblique companion for a neutral sans system: clear, consistent shapes with minimal stylistic distraction and a steady text rhythm. Its rounded construction and open counters suggest an emphasis on legibility and everyday versatility across digital and print applications.
Round characters like O/C/G read smoothly and continuous, and diagonals (V/W/X/Y) are sharp but not aggressive. Spacing appears balanced in the sample text, supporting steady word shapes at paragraph sizes, and the punctuation and figures visually match the letterforms’ calm, rounded logic.