Sans Normal Apkoz 1 is a regular weight, wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Acumin' by Adobe, 'AG Book W1G' by Berthold, 'Swiss 721' by Bitstream, 'Afical' by Formatype Foundry, 'Neue Helvetica' and 'Neue Helvetica Paneuropean' by Linotype, 'Neue June' by Matt Chansky, and 'NeoGram' by The Northern Block (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: ui text, product design, signage, presentations, editorial, clean, modern, neutral, friendly, practical, legibility, neutrality, versatility, clarity, geometric, rounded, open, even, crisp.
A clean geometric sans with broadly circular bowls and smooth, continuous curves paired with straight-sided stems. Proportions read slightly expansive, with generous internal counters and open apertures that keep forms clear at text sizes. Terminals are largely straight and unadorned, with consistent stroke weight and minimal modulation, producing an even typographic color. The lowercase set is straightforward and highly legible, with a simple single-storey “a” and “g” and compact, tidy joins throughout.
Well-suited to interface typography, product and brand systems that need a dependable sans, and signage where open counters help quick recognition. It also works comfortably for presentations and editorial layouts where a clean, contemporary voice is preferred.
The overall tone is modern and restrained, projecting a calm, no-nonsense clarity rather than strong personality. Its rounded geometry adds a mild friendliness while staying professional and neutral.
Designed to deliver straightforward readability with a geometric, rounded construction and an even, balanced rhythm across uppercase, lowercase, and numerals. The intent appears focused on versatile everyday use where clarity and consistency are the priority.
Round letters like C, O, and Q maintain smooth, near-monoline construction, and the numerals follow the same clean, open approach for consistent rhythm in mixed text. The shapes feel optimized for clarity and consistency, with little stylistic eccentricity.