Panno Sign is the first variant to be commercially released. Normal and rounded forms are available, and each form has two weights - Negative and Positive - to use against dark and bright backgrounds respectively.
Panno Text
Panno Text is another commercial variant. It has six weights, and each weight has an italic form.
Non-Latin letters
Currently, Panno has no glyph other than Latin letters and Hindu–Arabic numbers.
Hangil, a Hangul typeface designed for South Korean traffic signs, employs Panno for the Latin and numeral portion.
In use
Panno is one of the results of the South Korean traffic sign reform, along with Hangil. The typeface, called Hangil E-type (E as in English) within the package, also has a condensed form. It replaced a Latin grotesque typeface accompanied to Sandoll Gothic.