Sans Normal Abbuy 11 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Mesveda' by Agny Hasya Studio, 'Dikta Neue' by Atasi Studio, 'Articulo' by Gilar Studio, 'Equip' by Hoftype, 'Clear Sans' by Positype, 'Hidone' by RantauType, and 'Malnor Sans' by Sikifonts (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: ui labels, signage, presentations, brand systems, editorial decks, clean, modern, dynamic, neutral, technical, clarity, emphasis, modernization, motion, oblique, geometric, monoline, open counters, high legibility.
This typeface is an oblique, monoline sans with smooth, geometric construction and rounded bowls. Curves are clean and largely circular/elliptical, while diagonals and terminals are consistently sheared, producing a uniform forward-leaning rhythm. Stroke endings are plain and unadorned, with open apertures in letters like c, e, and s that keep forms readable. Numerals follow the same simplified geometry, with an oval 0 and straightforward, slightly angled figures that align well with the overall slant.
It should perform well in short-to-medium text settings where a clean sans is needed with added emphasis or directional energy—such as UI labels, navigation, charts, product copy, and presentation typography. The oblique stance also makes it suitable for branding accents, pull quotes, and headings that need distinction without becoming decorative.
The overall tone is modern and matter-of-fact, with a subtle sense of motion from the consistent oblique angle. It feels contemporary and utilitarian rather than expressive, suited to interfaces and information-forward design where clarity matters.
The design intent appears to be a clear, contemporary sans optimized for a smooth reading texture, then set into an oblique posture to convey motion and emphasis while maintaining straightforward, geometric letterforms.
The spacing and letterfit appear even, and the slant is steady across both uppercase and lowercase, helping lines of text hold a consistent texture. Round letters maintain a smooth flow while the more angular forms (like k, v, w, x, y) add crisp accents without disrupting the calm, geometric character.