Sans Normal Imboh 6 is a very bold, wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Jostern' by EMME grafica, 'Mohr Rounded' by Latinotype, 'Mazzard Soft' by Pepper Type, 'Qualion Round' by ROHH, and 'Volkswagen Serial' by SoftMaker (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: kids branding, posters, packaging, headlines, stickers, playful, bubbly, friendly, cheerful, cartoonish, friendly display, playful impact, softening tone, youth appeal, rounded, soft, chunky, bulky, bouncy.
A heavily rounded, monoline sans with inflated, pillow-like strokes and fully softened corners throughout. Counters are compact and often close up in tighter shapes, while apertures tend to be small, giving the face a dense, chunky color on the page. Proportions feel broad and stable with generous curves and minimal sharp joins; diagonals and terminals are consistently blunted for a smooth, toy-like silhouette. The overall rhythm is even and compact, prioritizing bold shape recognition over internal detail.
This style suits playful headlines, kids-oriented branding, toy and candy packaging, event posters, and short emphatic messaging where instant friendliness is desired. It also works well for labels, stickers, and social graphics that benefit from bold, rounded silhouettes.
The letterforms project a lighthearted, child-friendly tone with a bouncy, confectionery feel. Its soft geometry reads as approachable and humorous, leaning toward casual entertainment rather than formal communication.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum approachability and impact through rounded, inflated forms and simplified construction. It prioritizes a fun display personality and strong silhouette readability at larger sizes, rather than intricate detail or text-setting neutrality.
In longer lines, the dark typographic color is strong and attention-grabbing, with spacing that keeps the texture cohesive and punchy. Because counters are relatively small at this weight, clarity improves with larger sizes and ample line spacing, where the rounded forms can breathe.