Sans Normal Dydah 11 is a regular weight, very wide, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Ordina' by Schriftlabor (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: branding, headlines, posters, product ui, signage, modern, technical, dynamic, clean, futuristic, modernize, add motion, increase clarity, project tech, oblique, expanded, geometric, rounded, sleek.
A clean, expanded sans with a consistent oblique slant and smooth, geometric construction. Strokes are uniform with low contrast, and terminals read as crisp, slightly angled cuts rather than softened calligraphy. Counters are open and round (notably in O, C, e), while curves flow into straighter segments with an engineered, streamlined feel. Spacing appears generous, and the overall silhouette favors long horizontals and wide bowls, producing a broad, airy texture in text.
Well-suited to branding systems, large headlines, posters, and tech-leaning marketing where a wide, oblique voice helps create momentum. The open forms and even stroke weight also make it a strong candidate for UI labels, dashboards, and wayfinding/signage at medium-to-large sizes, where clarity and a modern tone are priorities.
The tone is contemporary and forward-leaning, pairing a sporty sense of motion with a disciplined, technical clarity. Its wide stance and steady rhythm feel confident and polished, suggesting modern interface and product design contexts rather than nostalgic or decorative ones.
Likely intended to deliver a modern, geometric sans voice with built-in dynamism through an italic slant and expanded proportions. The design emphasizes legibility through open counters and consistent stroke behavior while projecting a sleek, contemporary character for display and interface-forward applications.
The numeral set follows the same geometric logic, with rounded forms on 0/8/9 and a clean, open 4; figures look designed for quick recognition at display sizes. Uppercase and lowercase share a unified, simplified language, and the italic angle is applied consistently without introducing cursive joins.