Sans Normal Dilet 12 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, signage, presentations, branding, infographics, clean, modern, neutral, minimal, technical, clarity, neutrality, modernism, readability, versatility, monoline, geometric, open apertures, rounded terminals, generous spacing.
A crisp monoline sans with a geometric backbone and smoothly rounded curves. Strokes are even and steady, with circular bowls and clean joins that keep letterforms tidy and predictable. Uppercase shapes feel simple and architectural, while the lowercase maintains clear counters and relatively open apertures for readability. Overall spacing is moderate-to-generous, giving the type a calm rhythm in both the grid and the paragraph sample.
This font suits user interfaces, dashboards, and product copy where a clean, even texture is important. It also works well for wayfinding and signage, as well as presentations and infographics that benefit from straightforward forms. For branding, it fits modern, minimalist identities that prioritize clarity and neutrality.
The tone is contemporary and understated, projecting clarity over personality. Its restrained geometry and smooth curves read as calm, factual, and quietly polished, making it feel at home in modern interface and information-forward settings.
The design appears intended to deliver a dependable, modern sans for general-purpose communication, emphasizing geometric simplicity, consistent stroke behavior, and easy reading in continuous text.
Round letters (like C, O, and Q) appear close to true circles, and diagonals (A, V, W, X, Y) are clean and sharp without decorative modulation. The numerals follow the same simple, rounded construction, and the text sample shows consistent color and spacing across mixed-case passages.