I ride with North Road bars on all my bikes. The ones I favour are made by Uno Kalloy in Taiwan, though they carry a lot of expensive proprietary brandnames too. From a thickened section to mount the stem, to each side they sweep upwards and then curve backward to about forty degrees to a longish grip section.
Note that the proper, ergonomic, way to fit North Road bars is with the handgrips pointing down between fifteen and thirty degrees from horizontal, for which the upsweep and the long grip make allowance. You therefore need either a tall steering tube or an angled stem or a combination of the two to make a bike with properly fitted and angled North Road Bars fit you.
Positions with North Road bars can vary from semi-sporting (1) to as near fully upright. North Road bars are the most versatile as well as the most comfortable and most ergonomic bars I know.
Upside down North Road bars make a dashing moustache bar image if your back can handle it. Again, the grips should point downwards, not be horizontal.
Proper OEM North Road bars are supplied with pretty long grips to be sawn to length. It is not smart, ergonomically, for a tourer to rest the palm of his hand near the forefinger on the Rohloff rotary gear control for long days on the road, but for a short-distance credit card tourer, even to one sensitive about stress on his hands like me, it makes no difference, so I have a shorter Brooks leather grip on the right hand side to allow for the Rohloff control mounted inboard in the normal way. Another solution would be to get a piece of tube and fit it on an expanding plug to the end of the handlebar, so that the Rohloff control sits next to your little finger though it would operate in reverse order to the normal inboard mounting.
Those flat handlebars angled about 15 degrees all in one horizontal plane at their ends are not anywhere near as ergonomically sound as North Road bars, but they do look very sporting.
(1) With an adjustable stem like the Gazelle Switch, you can in fact put the handgrips to near vertical and achieve an aerodynamic flat back, that is, a fully sporting position. That's how I made a (truck assisted) personal record of a ton, over 100kph, on a Gazelle commuter bike with mudguards and overcoat protectors.