Sans Normal Wibop 2 is a bold, very wide, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, signage, merch, grunge, industrial, street, vintage, rugged, distressed display, vintage print, rugged branding, textured signage, distressed, stamped, weathered, inked, rounded.
A heavy, wide sans with rounded corners and broad, open counters, set with generous horizontal proportions and a steady, upright stance. The underlying shapes are simple and geometric-leaning, with smooth curves in O/C/G and straightforward, blocky construction in E/F/T and the numerals. A consistent distressed texture is cut into the strokes across the character set, producing speckled voids and worn edges that read like ink wear or abrasion while preserving clear silhouettes. Terminals are mostly blunt and softly squared, and curves maintain a sturdy, uniform rhythm that keeps the face legible at display sizes.
Best suited to posters, headlines, labels, and branding where a worn, tactile look is desirable. It works well for packaging, event graphics, and signage that aims for a rugged or vintage-industrial tone, and can add texture to simple layouts when used at medium to large sizes.
The distressed treatment gives the type a gritty, hands-on feel—more like stamped packaging, worn signage, or screen-printed merch than a pristine UI sans. It conveys a casual toughness and a retro-industrial character, balancing friendly rounded forms with an intentionally rough finish.
The design appears intended to deliver a bold, approachable sans foundation while adding a consistent distressed layer to evoke age, print wear, or surface abrasion. It prioritizes strong silhouettes and wide spacing-friendly proportions so the texture reads as character rather than reducing readability.
The texture is evenly applied across letters and figures, so the distressed effect feels like a deliberate overlay rather than irregular drawing. In text, the wide proportions create a strong horizontal presence, and the roughened interior details become more apparent as size increases, adding visual interest without collapsing the letterforms.