Sans Normal Byluz 2 is a light, wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: branding, headlines, ui, posters, packaging, futuristic, friendly, minimal, clean, playful, modernity, approachability, tech tone, clarity, distinctiveness, rounded, geometric, soft, airy, open.
A rounded geometric sans with monoline strokes and generously open counters. Curves are built from near-circular bowls and smooth, continuous arcs, paired with flat, squared terminals on many horizontals and verticals for a crisp finish. The rhythm is even and uncluttered, with ample interior space and a slightly extended feel that keeps words looking calm and spacious. Distinctive details—such as the single-storey lowercase forms, the curled J and U, and the open, looped bottom of the 2—add personality while maintaining a consistent, engineered geometry.
Well-suited for branding and headline settings where a sleek, friendly geometric voice is desired. Its open shapes and simple stroke logic can work effectively in UI labels and product surfaces, and it also fits posters and packaging that benefit from a modern, approachable tone.
The overall tone feels modern and optimistic, balancing a tech-forward sensibility with approachable, soft rounding. Its simplified shapes and spacious drawing read as clean and contemporary, with a subtle retro-futurist playfulness that keeps it from feeling sterile.
The design appears intended to deliver a contemporary geometric sans with a distinctive, slightly futuristic signature, using circular construction and rounded joins to keep the texture smooth and welcoming. It aims for clarity and cohesion across letters and numerals while introducing a few memorable, stylized forms for brand recognition.
Several glyphs lean on circular construction (notably O/o, 8, and bowls in B/P/R), and the uppercase set shows a deliberate mix of straight-sided structure with rounded joins. Numerals follow the same rounded logic, with clear, stylized forms (notably 2, 3, and 4) that prioritize visual cohesion over strict neutrality.