Sans Normal Abriz 2 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, italic, normal x-height, monospaced font visually similar to 'LFT Etica Mono' by TypeTogether (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: code, terminals, ui, data tables, captions, technical, efficient, modern, utilitarian, clean, alignment, legibility, system typography, emphasis, slanted, geometric, open counters, compact, crisp.
A slanted, monoline sans with a disciplined, grid-like rhythm and consistent character widths. Letterforms are built from simple geometric strokes and rounded bowls, with open counters and clear joins that keep shapes legible despite the italic angle. Curves are smooth and fairly circular, while diagonals and horizontals stay crisp, giving the set a tidy, engineered feel. Numerals follow the same construction, with straightforward, evenly weighted forms that align neatly to the same advance width as the letters.
Well suited to coding and terminal environments, where fixed character widths aid alignment and scanning. It also fits UI surfaces that need compact, predictable spacing—such as settings panels, logs, dashboards, and tabular data—while the slant can work for inline emphasis, annotations, or secondary text that needs differentiation without changing size.
The overall tone feels pragmatic and technical—more about clarity and systematized order than personality or ornament. The italic slant adds a sense of motion and emphasis, but the strict spacing and uniform stroke behavior keep it controlled and functional.
This design appears intended to provide a systematic, space-efficient italic companion for monospaced typography, balancing forward-leaning energy with strict alignment. The emphasis is on consistent metrics, clean geometry, and dependable legibility in structured text.
The monospaced cadence is visually prominent in the sample text, creating a steady texture with predictable word shapes and even color across lines. The italic angle is consistent across uppercase, lowercase, and figures, helping the design read as a cohesive family style rather than a simple slant applied to one subset.