Sans Normal Lybin 2 is a very bold, wide, medium contrast, italic, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Cebreja' and 'Cebreja Extra' by Rafaeiro Typeiro (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, packaging, advertising, playful, energetic, retro, friendly, punchy, attention grab, friendly tone, dynamic motion, retro display, brand voice, rounded, soft corners, bulky, bouncy, high impact.
A heavy, right-leaning sans with rounded, inflated forms and a soft, sculpted feel. Strokes are broadly consistent with gently tapered joins and occasional wedge-like terminals that add motion without introducing sharpness. Counters are compact and rounded, creating a dense, poster-ready color, while the overall rhythm stays smooth and continuous across curves. Uppercase shapes are sturdy and wide-set, and the lowercase maintains clear silhouettes with simplified, bold construction and minimal detailing.
Best suited for bold headlines, posters, and brand moments where warmth and impact are more important than long-form readability. It works well on packaging, promotional materials, and social graphics where its rounded weight and forward slant can add momentum and personality. Short lines, logos, and display-sized captions will benefit most from its dense, punchy presence.
The font projects a playful, upbeat tone with a slightly retro, cartoonish flavor. Its rounded massing and italic slant make it feel lively and friendly, leaning more toward expressive display than neutral text setting. The overall impression is confident and attention-grabbing, suited to energetic messaging.
Likely drawn to deliver a high-impact display voice that remains approachable through rounded construction and softened terminals. The italic slant and bouncy curvature suggest an intention to convey motion and friendliness while keeping letterforms simple, bold, and highly legible at large sizes.
The design emphasizes soft geometry and strong silhouette contrast between letters, making it read well at larger sizes. Numerals and capitals share the same chunky, rounded logic, reinforcing consistency for headlines and short bursts of copy.