Sans Normal Komas 14 is a bold, normal width, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font visually similar to 'FF Real Head' and 'FF Real Text' by FontFont and 'NeoGram' by The Northern Block (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, sportswear, advertising, sporty, dynamic, confident, modern, assertive, emphasis, momentum, impact, modernity, clarity, geometric, oblique, compact, clean, punchy.
A heavy, oblique sans with broadly geometric construction and smooth, continuous curves. Strokes are monolinear with very low contrast, and terminals are clean and mostly square-cut, giving a crisp, high-impact silhouette. The capitals are compact and sturdy with rounded bowls (B, D, O, P) and straightforward diagonals (A, K, N, V, W, X, Y, Z). Lowercase forms stay simple and closed, with a single-storey a and g, a rounded e with a horizontal bar, and a tall, gently curved descender on y; spacing appears even and the overall rhythm is tight and forward-leaning. Numerals are similarly solid and readable, with a plain, straight 1 and rounded 8/9 forms that match the letter bowls.
This style is well suited to headlines, subheads, posters, and campaign typography where a strong, forward-leaning emphasis is desired. It can also work for branding and packaging that benefits from a modern, athletic tone, and for short UI labels or callouts where impact is more important than extended reading comfort.
The overall tone is energetic and decisive, with a forward slant that reads as fast and active. Its clean geometry and dense weight project a contemporary, no-nonsense voice that feels suited to attention-grabbing messaging rather than delicate or formal contexts.
The design appears intended to deliver a bold, modern voice through simple geometric forms, consistent obliquing, and tightly controlled curves. It prioritizes immediacy and visual momentum, aiming for high legibility at display sizes while maintaining a clean, contemporary texture in short text.
Round counters remain generously open for the weight, which helps prevent the design from feeling overly compressed in text. The italic angle is consistent across capitals, lowercase, and figures, producing a unified, flowing texture in longer lines.