Sans Normal Dilet 11 is a light, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Avenir', 'Avenir Next', 'Avenir Next Arabic', 'Avenir Next Cyrillic', 'Avenir Next Georgian', 'Avenir Next Hebrew', 'Avenir Next Paneuropean', 'Avenir Next Thai', and 'Avenir Next World' by Linotype (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: ui text, editorial, branding, packaging, signage, clean, modern, neutral, friendly, minimal, versatility, readability, modernity, simplicity, rounded, open apertures, soft terminals, monoline, geometric.
A clean, monoline sans with gently rounded geometry and smooth, circular curves. Strokes are even and consistent, with soft terminals and largely closed, well-balanced counters. Proportions lean slightly geometric—round letters like O and Q read as near-circles—while maintaining comfortable text rhythm through open apertures and clear joins. The lowercase shows straightforward, uncluttered construction with a simple single-storey a and g, and a clean, modern numerals set with minimal quirks.
Well-suited to interface and product typography where a clean, modern sans is needed without visual noise. It should work comfortably for editorial copy, headings, and general-purpose branding, and can scale to signage and wayfinding thanks to its open shapes and steady rhythm.
The overall tone is modern and neutral, with a friendly approachability coming from the rounded forms and soft endings. It feels calm and understated rather than expressive, supporting a contemporary, minimal visual voice.
Designed to be a versatile, contemporary sans that prioritizes clarity and smooth geometry. The restrained, rounded construction suggests an aim for broad usability across digital and print contexts while keeping a friendly, modern character.
Letterforms emphasize clarity: bowls and counters stay open in running text, and the spacing appears even and unforced at paragraph size. Details are restrained—no sharp calligraphic modulation—so the design reads consistently across capitals, lowercase, and figures.