Sans Normal Afnik 14 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font visually similar to 'BR Hendrix' and 'BR Omega' by Brink; 'Lonie', 'Lonie Soft', and 'Maincode' by Par Défaut; 'Nurom Next' by The Northern Block; and 'Causten' by Trustha (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: ui labels, signage, headlines, branding, technical docs, modern, clean, dynamic, functional, technical, clarity, modernization, emphasis, system use, neutrality, oblique, geometric, monolinear, open counters, high legibility.
A clean oblique sans with monolinear strokes, smooth geometric curves, and crisp terminals. The forms are compact and consistent, with rounded bowls and open apertures that keep counters clear in both uppercase and lowercase. The italic angle is steady across the set, giving letters and numerals a cohesive forward rhythm without introducing calligraphic modulation. Figures are straightforward and sturdy, with a slashed zero and simple, angular construction in diagonals and joins.
Works well for UI labeling, navigational text, and product surfaces where a clean oblique style can add emphasis while staying highly readable. It also suits contemporary headlines and brand wordmarks, and performs reliably in informational layouts like manuals or technical documentation.
The overall tone is contemporary and purposeful, with a subtle sense of motion from the oblique stance. It reads as pragmatic and efficient rather than expressive, suited to interfaces and modern brand systems where clarity and speed matter.
Likely designed as a modern-purpose oblique sans that provides a clean, energetic voice while preserving straightforward, highly legible letterforms. The consistent geometry and steady slant suggest an emphasis on system-friendly clarity and dependable text setting across common Latin letters and figures.
Uppercase proportions feel balanced and restrained, while the lowercase maintains clear differentiation between similar shapes through open joins and distinct terminals. Spacing appears even, supporting smooth word shapes in running text, and the slant adds emphasis without feeling overly stylized.