Sans Normal Abgen 7 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Mesveda' by Agny Hasya Studio, 'Normaliq' by Differentialtype, 'Glimp' by OneSevenPointFive, and 'Hidone' and 'Kaliden' by RantauType (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: ui labels, branding, editorial, presentations, data display, clean, modern, neutral, technical, efficient, modern utility, clear emphasis, neutral tone, smooth geometry, oblique, monolinear, rounded, open apertures, high legibility.
A slanted, monolinear sans with rounded, elliptical construction and smooth joins. Curves are clean and continuous, with open counters and generous apertures that keep letters from clogging in text. Terminals are mostly sheared and straightforward, producing a crisp rhythm, while proportions stay balanced across caps and lowercase with a comfortably readable x-height. Numerals follow the same simple, rounded logic, with clear differentiation and steady spacing that reads evenly in continuous lines.
Well-suited for interface copy, navigation labels, and product UI where a clean italic is needed for emphasis without sacrificing clarity. It can also serve in modern branding systems, marketing collateral, and editorial pull quotes, and it performs reliably for dashboards and lightweight data display where steady rhythm and legible shapes matter.
The overall tone is contemporary and matter-of-fact: streamlined, polite, and functional rather than expressive. Its consistent oblique stance adds motion and immediacy without feeling aggressive, making it feel modern, agile, and quietly technical.
The design appears intended as a practical, contemporary italic sans that provides a smooth, geometric feel and dependable readability. Its emphasis seems to be on clean texture and consistent slant for versatile use across both short headings and longer passages.
The italic angle is consistent across the set, and the design relies on geometric rounding more than calligraphic contrast, which keeps texture even. Round letters (C, O, Q, e, o) look especially smooth, and the forms maintain clarity at display sizes while still holding together as a coherent text face.