With open proportions and a humanist sans serif structure, Nata Sans is made for clear, slow-paced reading on screen.
Its generous x-height and short ascenders and descenders give it a functional, sober presence, making it a solid alternative to Helvetica in digital and editorial contexts. The curvature of letters like “a” and “o” establishes the core compositional principle that gives consistency and identity to the entire type system.
Version 2.0 supports 219 Latin-based languages (Latin Plus), Cyrillic Extended, and Vietnamese, totaling 1022 glyphs.
OpenType features include contextual alternates, stylistic sets, tabular and proportional numerals, fractions, superscripts, localized forms, and more.
A distinctive feature is the automatic conversion of sequences like :smile: or :sad: into emoji-style ligature glyphs, ideal for expressive headlines or unconventional typographic experiments.
Nata Sans is released under the SIL Open Font License (OFL), which allows free use, modification, and distribution for both personal and commercial projects.