Sans Normal Arbet 1 is a regular weight, wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Cedora' by Lafontype, 'Interval Next' by Mostardesign, 'Belle Sans' by Park Street Studio, 'Nauman' by The Northern Block, and 'Nuno' by Type.p (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: ui text, branding, wayfinding, editorial, presentations, clean, modern, neutral, utilitarian, friendly, clarity, versatility, modernization, system design, neutrality, geometric, open, crisp, monoline, balanced.
A clean, geometric sans with low-contrast, largely monoline strokes and smooth circular/elliptical bowls. The forms are open and legible, with generous apertures in letters like C, G, S, and e, and a straightforward, unembellished construction throughout. Uppercase shapes feel broad and stable with consistent stroke endings, while the lowercase keeps simple, familiar silhouettes and a steady rhythm. Numerals are clear and contemporary, with a straightforward “1” and rounded “0/8/9” that match the overall bowl geometry.
It works well for UI and product typography, signage and wayfinding, and general-purpose editorial or presentation settings where clean readability is the priority. The steady rhythm and open forms also suit logos and brand systems that need a modern, straightforward sans.
The font conveys a modern, neutral tone—confident and matter-of-fact rather than expressive. Its even texture and restrained detailing feel professional and approachable, suitable for interfaces and brand systems that want clarity without personality overload.
The design intention appears to be a versatile, contemporary sans focused on clarity and consistency, using geometric construction and low-contrast strokes to create an even, reliable reading texture across display and text sizes.
Overall spacing and counters read open in the text sample, producing an even color and good separation between similar shapes. Curves and joins appear carefully regularized, giving the design a consistent, engineered feel across uppercase, lowercase, and figures.