This is Range Sans, the sans-serif counterpart to Range Serif. It can be classified as a monstrous, with the distinctive angular details from the serif family making themselves understood in the arches and bowls of the lower case. The variety of weights is larger than Variety Serif, with two more weights at the lighter end of the spectrum. The weights from light to black represent their seriffed sis, so can be interchanged with them easily while keeping a similar text color and vertical metrics. This is beneficial for adding focus; Range Sans is deliberately doing not have an italic, but the italics from Range Serif work better than you might anticipate in running text, particularly for the light and routine weights.
Variety Sans has a modern, rather geometric look that provides itself to uses such as corporate identities, minimalist graphic style, and logo designs. The middle weights do work well in running text, however, with the angled details being less obvious at little sizes.
Designed for requiring typography, supporting most Latin-based languages, Range Sans is geared up with real little caps for all weights, a variety of numeral styles (proportional- and tabular- lining and oldstyle figures, little cap figures, numerators, denominators, superscripts and subscripts/scientific inferiors), automated fractions, a set of beneficial arrows, case sensitive forms, and a series of currency symbols including current additions: Turkish Lira, Indian Rupee and Russian Ruble.
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