Sans Normal Kirez 7 is a bold, wide, low contrast, italic, normal x-height, monospaced font visually similar to 'Jagerlay' by Picador (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: code ui, terminal, data tables, technical docs, labels, industrial, technical, assertive, utilitarian, retro, alignment, emphasis, clarity, utility, slanted, sturdy, blocky, compact, crisp.
A slanted, heavy sans with uniform character widths and a steady, mechanical rhythm. The forms are built from broad, rounded strokes with squared terminals, creating a compact, sturdy silhouette and consistent color across lines. Curves are full and smooth (notably in C/O/S), while joins and diagonals stay clean and direct; counters are moderately open for a dense but controlled texture. Numerals are robust and straightforward, matching the letters in width and weight, and the overall spacing reads even and grid-like.
Well-suited to coding environments, terminals, and developer tooling where fixed-width alignment matters, as well as spreadsheets, dashboards, and other tabular settings. It also works for short technical headings, labels, packaging callouts, and industrial-styled branding where a bold, utilitarian voice is desired.
The font conveys a pragmatic, engineered tone—confident, workmanlike, and slightly retro in its monospaced cadence. Its slant adds forward motion and emphasis, giving it an energetic, no-nonsense voice suited to functional communication.
The design appears intended to deliver a highly consistent, fixed-width reading experience with strong emphasis and clear alignment, combining rounded sans geometry with a decisive slant for momentum and presence.
The combination of strong weight, fixed-width spacing, and a consistent slant produces a distinctive typewriter-like cadence without delicate details. At text sizes it creates a dark, uniform typographic color, while at larger sizes the rounded geometry and firm terminals become more pronounced.