Sans Normal Dylug 10 is a regular weight, wide, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Akzidenz-Grotesk Next' by Berthold, 'Murs Gothic' by Kobuzan, and 'Latino Gothic' by Latinotype (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: ui labels, wayfinding, brand systems, packaging, posters, modern, technical, clean, efficient, neutral, clarity, modernity, motion, neutrality, functionality, oblique, geometric, monoline, open apertures, rounded forms.
This typeface is an oblique sans with a monoline construction and broad, open counters. Curves are largely circular/elliptical and transitions stay smooth, with minimal stroke modulation. The italic angle is consistent across capitals, lowercase, and figures, producing a forward-leaning rhythm. Letterforms are spacious and airy, with generous internal space in bowls (B, P, R, 8) and open shapes in C, G, S, and e; terminals are clean and unbracketed. The numerals follow the same slanted, geometric logic, with a simple 1 and rounded 0/8/9 that read clearly alongside the letters.
It suits interface and product contexts where clarity and a modern, angled emphasis are useful—navigation labels, dashboards, and informational typography. The forward slant also works well for branding accents, packaging copy, and headline or poster settings where a sleek, dynamic sans is desired without strong stylistic quirks.
The overall tone is contemporary and matter-of-fact, with a subtle sense of motion from the steady slant. Its geometric softness keeps it approachable, while the clean, engineered drawing leans toward a functional, technical voice rather than expressive or handwritten personality.
The design appears intended as a practical oblique companion for contemporary sans typography: streamlined forms, open counters, and consistent geometry aimed at clean readability while adding directional energy through the slant.
Proportions favor breadth and legibility: many glyphs feel horizontally generous, and spacing appears even, supporting smooth text color in the sample paragraph. The lowercase maintains a straightforward, workmanlike texture with open apertures and uncomplicated joins that help prevent clogging at smaller sizes.