Sans Normal Argit 2 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'DuGrotesk' by Dutype Foundry, 'Hando' and 'Hando Soft' by Eko Bimantara, 'Afical' by Formatype Foundry, 'Neufile Grotesk' by Halbfett, 'Helvetica Now' by Monotype, and 'Arbeit' by Studio Few (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: wayfinding, ui labels, posters, branding, packaging, modern, technical, utilitarian, minimal, stencil motif, technical identity, system signage, modern utility, geometric, monoline, clean, crisp, open counters.
A clean sans with predominantly geometric construction and an even, monoline stroke. Round letters lean on near-circular bowls (O, C, G) while straight-sided forms keep a squared, architectural feel in counters and terminals. Distinctive stencil-like breaks appear as small vertical gaps cutting through many rounded forms (notably O/Q/0, c/e, and similar shapes), giving the design a segmented rhythm without adding contrast. Spacing appears straightforward and the overall color on the page is consistent and dark, with simple, unadorned terminals and minimal detailing.
Well-suited to signage and wayfinding, product labeling, interface labels, and headings where the stencil-like cuts can contribute character. It can also work in branding and posters that want a clean geometric base with a technical twist; for longer text, it will read best at comfortable sizes where the segmented details remain clear.
The segmented cuts introduce a technical, engineered tone, evoking instrumentation, wayfinding systems, or industrial labeling. Despite the geometric neutrality, the repeated interruptions add a subtle sci‑fi/tech accent that reads as contemporary and functional rather than playful or calligraphic.
The design appears intended to blend a neutral geometric sans foundation with a consistent system of cutouts, creating a recognizable, industrial-stencil signature while preserving straightforward readability. The goal seems to be a contemporary workhorse with a distinctive technical cue.
The breaks are most visible in circular and semi-circular glyphs, creating strong character in numerals and in repeated round letters within text. Uppercase forms appear broad and stable, while lowercase stays simple and legible with single-storey shapes where expected, keeping the overall texture calm even with the stencil motif.