Sans Normal Habot 6 is a regular weight, narrow, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui labels, packaging, posters, children’s media, social graphics, friendly, casual, playful, approachable, hand-drawn, approachability, informality, warmth, readability, personality, rounded, soft terminals, open counters, quirky, informal.
A rounded, monoline sans with softly squared curves and gently blunted terminals throughout. Strokes maintain an even weight with subtle, hand-drawn irregularity that keeps the texture lively without becoming messy. Forms are compact and slightly condensed, with open counters and simple construction; joints and curves feel rubbery and smooth rather than geometric-sharp. Lowercase shows straightforward, readable shapes with single-storey-style simplicity and a lightly quirky rhythm across letters and numerals.
Works well for display-to-short-text settings where a friendly, informal impression is desired—app/interface labels, posters, packaging, and brand touchpoints that benefit from a human touch. It can also suit children’s or educational materials and social media graphics, where its rounded clarity and approachable tone help maintain readability while staying playful.
The overall tone is warm and personable, like neat marker lettering—confident but not formal. Its softened shapes and slightly uneven character add a playful, human quality that reads as relaxed and friendly. The font suggests an everyday, conversational voice rather than a corporate or editorial one.
The design appears intended to deliver a clean, legible sans with a hand-made warmth—prioritizing approachability and ease of reading over strict geometric precision. The softened terminals and gently irregular rhythm suggest a goal of adding personality while keeping letterforms simple and consistent in continuous text.
Capitals are clean and uncomplicated, while lowercase adds more personality in letters with hooks and descenders, creating a bouncy line rhythm in text. Numerals match the same soft, rounded logic, helping headings and short figures feel consistent with the letterforms.