Sans Normal Dylot 10 is a regular weight, wide, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: branding, editorial, ui text, packaging, headlines, modern, clean, friendly, informal, approachable, warm clarity, contemporary tone, easy reading, energetic texture, rounded, humanist, open apertures, soft corners, lively.
A rounded, slanted sans with smooth curves and open, readable counters. Strokes are evenly weighted with minimal contrast, and terminals are cleanly cut, producing a crisp, contemporary texture. Proportions lean spacious, with broad uppercase forms and generous interior space; lowercase shapes remain compact but clear, with a single-storey a and g and a gently curved, descending y. Numerals follow the same soft, geometric logic, with rounded bowls and straightforward construction that maintains consistent rhythm in text.
This font suits brand systems, marketing copy, and editorial layouts where a clean sans needs a warmer, more personable feel. It can work well for UI text and product interfaces thanks to its open counters and straightforward shapes, and it’s also effective in headlines and short blocks of copy where the slant adds energy without sacrificing clarity.
The overall tone is modern and approachable, combining a clean sans structure with a relaxed, conversational slant. Rounded forms and open shapes give it a friendly, informal voice without feeling overly playful, making it suitable for contemporary communication and branding that wants warmth and clarity.
The design appears intended to deliver a contemporary sans-serif voice with a softer, more human character, using rounded construction and open forms to keep reading comfortable. The consistent slant suggests a focus on adding momentum and informality while retaining the stability and neutrality expected from a general-purpose sans.
The italic slant is steady and consistent across capitals, lowercase, and figures, helping lines of text feel dynamic. Curves and diagonals (notably in V/W/X/Y) are smooth and balanced, while letters like e, s, and a keep wide openings that support legibility at typical reading sizes.