Sans Normal Onbiy 19 is a bold, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'FF Kievit' and 'FF Legato' by FontFont and 'Sana Sans' by Latinotype (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, branding, signage, packaging, ui labels, modern, friendly, confident, clean, utilitarian, clarity, impact, modernization, versatility, brand voice, geometric, rounded, closed apertures, flat terminals, compact.
A sturdy geometric sans with broad, rounded counters and tightly controlled, low-contrast strokes. Curves are smooth and near-circular (notably in O/C/G and the numerals), while terminals are mostly flat and squared-off, giving a crisp, engineered finish. The lowercase is compact with closed or narrowed apertures (especially e/s), and the overall rhythm is even and dense, producing strong color in text. Numerals match the letterforms with simple, continuous curves and consistent stroke heft.
Works well for headlines and short paragraphs where strong presence and legibility are needed, such as branding systems, packaging, wayfinding, and posters. The dense texture and compact apertures also suit UI labels and interface headings where a clear, contemporary sans is desired.
The font reads as contemporary and approachable, combining friendly roundness with a firm, confident presence. Its compact shapes and solid silhouettes feel practical and no-nonsense, suited to straightforward communication rather than expressive or delicate typography.
Likely designed to provide a dependable, modern sans with geometric clarity and a friendly roundness, optimized for impactful setting in display and editorial contexts while remaining orderly enough for practical information design.
Uppercase forms are clean and geometric, with minimal shaping and a straightforward spine-and-bowl construction in letters like B/D/P/R. Lowercase details—such as the single-storey a and g and the simple, compact t—reinforce a modern, functional tone. The punctuation shown (period, colon, ampersand, apostrophe) follows the same heavy, rounded logic for consistency at display sizes.