Sans Normal Vidaz 2 is a bold, normal width, monoline, italic, normal x-height font visually similar to 'BR Candor' and 'BR Omny' by Brink, 'Lader' by Groteskly Yours, 'Neurial Grotesk' by Indian Type Foundry, 'Delecta' by Robert Corseanschi, and 'Causten' and 'Causten Round' by Trustha (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, branding, packaging, posters, ui labels, friendly, playful, modern, casual, approachable, approachability, modernity, clarity, energy, brand voice, rounded, soft, geometric, high-contrast terminals, open counters.
A rounded, forward-leaning sans with smooth, monoline strokes and generous curves throughout. The design relies on circular and elliptical construction, producing open counters and broad, soft shoulders. Terminals are clean and subtly sheared by the slant, with a slightly lively baseline rhythm that keeps letterforms from feeling overly rigid. Numerals are similarly rounded and sturdy, matching the letterforms in stroke weight and curvature for a cohesive texture in mixed alphanumerics.
Best suited to headlines, short blocks of copy, and display settings where the rounded geometry and slanted stance can add personality without sacrificing legibility. It can also work for brand systems, packaging, and UI labels that want a friendly, contemporary tone and clear shapes at medium-to-large sizes.
The overall tone is upbeat and approachable, with a friendly geometric warmth that reads as contemporary and informal. Its rounded shapes and consistent stroke behavior give it an inviting, non-authoritarian voice that works well for energetic messaging.
Likely designed to deliver a modern rounded sans voice with extra energy from a consistent slant, balancing geometric simplicity with an approachable feel. The emphasis appears to be on clear, sturdy forms that maintain a smooth, playful rhythm in both uppercase and lowercase.
Uppercase forms feel stable and headline-ready, while lowercase shapes maintain clarity through open apertures and ample interior space. The italic angle is pronounced enough to add momentum without turning the forms into a script-like style, keeping the texture clean in continuous text.