Sans Normal Uldir 15 is a regular weight, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Few Grotesk' by Studio Few and 'Eloquia' by Typekiln (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: ui text, product design, wayfinding, presentations, editorial, neutral, modern, clean, straightforward, technical, versatility, clarity, system type, modern neutrality, geometric, monolinear, open apertures, even color, high legibility.
A clean, monolinear sans with predominantly geometric construction and smooth, round bowls. Strokes stay even and dark without noticeable flare, creating a steady text color from caps through lowercase. Counters are open and fairly generous, and terminals are simple and unadorned, with flat-ended horizontals and verticals. Curved letters (C, G, O, S) are broadly circular, while diagonals (V, W, X, Y) are crisp and evenly weighted. The figures follow the same straightforward rhythm, with clear, utilitarian forms and consistent proportions.
It suits interface copy, product and brand systems, and general-purpose text where clarity and an even typographic color are important. The stable geometry and simple shapes also make it a solid choice for signage, charts, and presentation graphics, as well as editorial layouts needing a modern sans for both headings and body text.
The overall tone is neutral and contemporary, leaning toward a practical, no-nonsense voice. Its restrained geometry and consistent rhythm feel modern and technical rather than expressive or decorative.
The design intention reads as a versatile, contemporary workhorse sans: consistent, geometric-leaning forms and even stroke weight prioritize clarity and predictable layout behavior across sizes. It appears built to be broadly usable in everyday communication rather than to project a strong historical or calligraphic character.
Spacing and letterfit appear balanced and regular, supporting smooth reading in paragraphs. Round characters keep a stable silhouette while straight-sided forms maintain a tidy baseline and cap line presence, helping the font hold its shape in UI-like settings and longer lines of text.