Sans Normal Fanur 11 is a very light, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: branding, headlines, posters, logotypes, packaging, minimal, airy, modern, elegant, architectural, refinement, modernity, simplicity, geometric clarity, premium tone, geometric, monoline, rounded, delicate, clean.
A delicate monoline sans with a geometric construction and generous open counters. Curves are close to circular with smooth joins, while straight strokes stay consistently thin, producing an even, airy texture. Uppercase forms are clean and simplified, with round letters (C, O, G, Q) drawn from near-perfect circles and a restrained, linear treatment in E/F/L/T. Lowercase follows the same geometric logic with single-storey a and g, a compact, rounded e with a light cross-stroke, and long, simple ascenders/descenders that keep the rhythm open and uncluttered. Numerals mirror the circular vocabulary, with 0/8 built from clean loops and angular figures like 4/7 kept spare and linear.
Best suited to display typography where the thin strokes and geometric forms can breathe—brand marks, wordmarks, fashion or beauty packaging, poster titles, and magazine headlines. It can work for short UI labels or captions when set large enough, but its delicate stroke weight favors clean backgrounds and careful size/contrast choices.
The overall tone is quiet, refined, and contemporary, with a gallery-like minimalism that feels design-forward rather than expressive. Its thin, even strokes suggest sophistication and precision, creating a calm, airy voice suited to modern editorial and brand settings.
The design appears intended as a refined geometric hairline sans that prioritizes clarity of form and a modern, understated aesthetic. Its consistent circular construction and minimal detailing point to a purpose of delivering a sleek, premium tone for contemporary visual identities and display typography.
The spacing in the sample text reads intentionally open, helping the hairline strokes stay legible at display sizes. The design leans on circular geometry throughout, with minimal terminals and few idiosyncratic details, emphasizing a consistent, disciplined system.