Sans Normal Abgaf 6 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Corelia' by Hurufatfont, 'Air Superfamily' by Positype, 'Core Sans E' by S-Core, 'NeoGram' by The Northern Block, 'Nomina' by Tokotype, and 'Nu Sans' by Typecalism Foundryline (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: ui text, editorial, branding, presentations, captions, modern, clean, dynamic, neutral, technical, clarity, modernization, emphasis, versatility, oblique, humanist, open apertures, rounded terminals, smooth curves.
A smooth oblique sans with gently rounded curves and largely monoline strokes. Letterforms are built from clean elliptical bowls and open counters, with softly finished terminals and minimal modulation. Proportions feel balanced and legible: capitals are straightforward and geometric-leaning, while lowercase forms keep a readable, contemporary rhythm; the italic angle is consistent across letters and figures. Numerals follow the same simple, rounded construction and align visually with the text color in running copy.
Works well for UI and product typography, navigation, and short-form reading where a clear oblique voice is useful. It also suits contemporary editorial layouts, presentations, and brand applications that want a modern sans tone with a subtle forward-leaning emphasis.
The overall tone is contemporary and understated, with a slight sense of motion from the oblique stance. It reads as clean and functional rather than expressive, suitable for interfaces and modern brand systems that need clarity without stiffness.
Likely intended as a practical oblique sans for everyday communication, prioritizing clarity, smooth curves, and consistent rhythm in continuous text. The restrained detailing suggests a focus on versatile, system-friendly typography that can add emphasis through slant without sacrificing legibility.
The design maintains even spacing and a steady typographic color in paragraph settings, with open shapes that help distinguish similar forms at smaller sizes. The italic is visually integrated as a primary style rather than a decorative slant, keeping punctuation and figures coherent with the letterforms.