Sans Normal Eddid 4 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Interval Next' by Mostardesign and 'Haboro Sans' by insigne (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: ui labels, dashboards, product design, infographics, captions, clean, modern, efficient, technical, neutral, emphasis, legibility, neutrality, utility, humanist, open apertures, rounded terminals, slanted, airy.
This is a slanted sans with smooth, low-contrast strokes and gently rounded joins. The letterforms are built from clean arcs and straight segments with a consistent rhythm, showing open apertures and uncluttered counters that keep shapes readable at smaller sizes. Uppercase forms are compact and straightforward, while the lowercase includes a double-storey “g” and single-storey “a,” with simple, rounded terminals throughout. Numerals follow the same restrained construction, with clear curves and minimal modulation.
It performs well in UI text, dashboards, and product surfaces where a clean italic is needed for hierarchy, emphasis, or secondary information. It also suits infographics, captions, and editorial sidebars where compact, legible slanted text helps differentiate content without adding ornament.
The overall tone is calm and contemporary, leaning more toward functional clarity than expressive flair. Its slant adds a sense of motion and emphasis without feeling aggressive, creating a professional voice suited to understated branding and interface-driven communication.
The design appears intended as a versatile, modern italic companion for everyday typography, prioritizing clarity, even texture, and a controlled, contemporary slant. The restrained curves and open shapes suggest an emphasis on legibility and system-friendly consistency across letters and numbers.
The spacing feels even and the silhouettes stay stable across straight and curved characters, producing a tidy texture in paragraph settings. Curved letters like C, G, and S appear smoothly drawn with balanced bowls, and the slant is consistent across caps, lowercase, and figures.