Sans Normal Bomib 11 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, upright, tall x-height font visually similar to 'SST', 'SST Arabic', and 'SST Vietnamese' by Monotype; 'Babel Sans' by S6 Foundry; and 'NuOrder' and 'Regan' by The Northern Block (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: ui text, web content, editorial, signage, presentations, neutral, modern, clean, straightforward, friendly, clarity, versatility, neutrality, modernity, legibility, geometric, open apertures, even color, high legibility, crisp terminals.
A clean, geometric sans with monolinear strokes and a steady, even typographic color. Round letters lean toward circular construction (notably O/C/G), while straight-sided forms keep a crisp, rational geometry. Terminals are mostly flat and uncluttered, with open apertures and clear counters that hold up well in text. The lowercase is compact and utilitarian, with a simple single-storey “g” and a minimal, readable “a,” supporting a direct, contemporary texture.
Well-suited for interface and product text, web and app UI, and general-purpose editorial typography where steady rhythm and clear forms are needed. It can also serve effectively in wayfinding and informational signage, as well as slides and corporate communications that benefit from a neutral, modern voice.
The overall tone is neutral and modern, prioritizing clarity over personality-driven quirks. Its geometry gives it a slightly technical, orderly feel, while the smooth curves keep it approachable rather than rigid. The result reads as calm, dependable, and contemporary.
The design appears intended as a versatile, general-purpose sans that emphasizes geometric clarity and consistent rhythm for comfortable reading across headlines and body text. It favors simplicity and legibility, aiming for a contemporary look that integrates easily into many visual systems.
Uppercase forms show confident, simplified shapes (a clean diagonal-legged R, balanced S, and a straightforward G), and the numerals are plain and readable with consistent stroke weight. Spacing appears even in the sample text, producing a stable rhythm across mixed-case passages.