Sans Normal Vigum 12 is a bold, normal width, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Interval Next' by Mostardesign, 'Mentone' by Paragraph, 'PTL Maurea' by Primetype, 'NuOrder' by The Northern Block, and 'Bartosh' by jpFonts (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, sports branding, packaging, signage, energetic, sporty, confident, modern, punchy, create motion, maximize impact, modern branding, display clarity, oblique, geometric, rounded, monoline, compact.
A heavy, oblique sans with rounded, geometric construction and largely monoline strokes. Curves are smooth and full, while joins and terminals are clean and mostly blunt, giving the shapes a firm, contemporary feel. Counters are relatively open for the weight, and the overall fit feels slightly compact, helping the letterforms hold together into a dense, high-impact texture. Numerals and capitals share the same forward-leaning rhythm, reinforcing a consistent slanted color across lines.
Best suited for headlines and short, prominent text where its weight and slant can create impact—posters, packaging fronts, signage, and sports or fitness branding. It can also work for UI labels or promotional subheads when set with generous spacing, but it is most effective when used as a display face rather than for long reading.
The forward slant and dense, dark presence convey motion and urgency, reading as athletic and assertive rather than formal. Its smooth geometry keeps it friendly and approachable, but the overall tone remains strong and attention-grabbing—well suited to branding that wants speed, confidence, and modernity.
Designed to deliver a fast, contemporary voice with strong emphasis and a cohesive oblique rhythm. The geometry and rounded forms suggest a focus on clean reproduction and brand-friendly consistency, prioritizing bold presence and immediate legibility in attention-driven contexts.
Round letters like O/C/G emphasize elliptical bowls, while diagonals (A/V/W/X/Y) look sturdy and stable, avoiding spindly joins. The lowercase maintains a clean, simplified structure that favors clarity over calligraphic nuance, and the numerals are straightforward and highly legible at display sizes.