Sans Normal Eblus 11 is a light, normal width, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: editorial, ui text, branding, packaging, signage, modern, clean, friendly, airy, readability, modern tone, soft emphasis, neutral utility, cohesion, humanist, rounded, open apertures, upright italic, soft terminals.
A slanted sans with smooth, rounded construction and gently modulated geometry. Strokes stay even and streamlined, with soft terminal endings and open counters that keep forms clear at text sizes. Curves are generous and circular in letters like C, O, and G, while diagonals in A, V, W, and Y are crisp and consistently angled, reinforcing the forward-leaning rhythm. Lowercase forms read straightforward and contemporary, with a single-storey a and g and compact, unobtrusive joins that maintain an even texture. Numerals follow the same rounded logic, with simple, legible shapes and minimal ornament.
Works well for editorial typography where an italic is needed for emphasis, pull quotes, or secondary hierarchy while staying highly readable. The open forms and clean rhythm also suit UI labels, dashboards, and product interfaces, and the friendly modern tone can support branding, packaging, and light signage where clarity and momentum are desired.
The overall tone is contemporary and approachable, balancing a technical cleanliness with a mild human warmth. Its italic stance adds momentum and emphasis without feeling flashy, making it suitable for energetic but restrained typography.
Designed to provide a crisp, contemporary italic sans that remains readable and calm in continuous text. The rounded construction and open apertures suggest an emphasis on clarity and approachability, while the steady slant and consistent geometry aim for a cohesive, efficient typographic voice across letters and numerals.
Spacing and proportions create an open, breathable color in running text, with counters and apertures that resist clogging. The slant is consistent across capitals, lowercase, and figures, giving a cohesive, editorial-leaning voice for emphasis and auxiliary text.