Sans Normal Anlet 10 is a bold, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Helixa' by Designova, 'Metro Sans' by Studio Few, and 'Gordita' by Type Atelier (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, branding, ui labels, posters, signage, modern, friendly, clean, confident, techy, clarity, versatility, modern branding, systematic geometry, screen-friendly, geometric, rounded, crisp, compact, high-contrast counters.
A geometric sans with sturdy, even stroke weight and rounded bowls that feel drawn from clean circular forms. Proportions are fairly compact with consistent cap height and a balanced, readable lowercase; apertures stay open enough to avoid clogging at display sizes. Terminals are mostly clean and straight, while curves are smooth and controlled, giving the overall texture a crisp, even rhythm. Numerals follow the same built-from-geometry logic, with clear shapes and stable baseline alignment.
Works especially well for headlines, logo wordmarks, and brand systems that want a clean geometric voice. The sturdy strokes and clear forms also suit UI labels, navigation, and signage-style applications where quick recognition matters. In longer settings it will be most comfortable at larger text sizes where its weight and compact shapes have room to breathe.
The overall tone is contemporary and approachable—confident without feeling harsh. Its rounded geometry and straightforward construction read as practical and friendly, with a subtle tech and wayfinding sensibility that fits modern interfaces and branding.
Likely designed to provide a dependable, contemporary sans with geometric order and a friendly edge, prioritizing consistency and clarity across caps, lowercase, and numerals. The emphasis on smooth curves and clean terminals suggests a focus on versatile display and interface use rather than expressive or decorative detail.
The design leans on simple, repeatable shapes (notably in C/G/O/Q and the lowercase rounds), producing a uniform color on the page. The sample text shows good cohesion between uppercase and lowercase, and the heavy-but-not-stuffy weight makes it feel well-suited to short-to-medium lines of copy where clarity is important.