Sans Normal Boley 4 is a regular weight, wide, low contrast, upright, tall x-height, monospaced font visually similar to 'Freigeist' by René Bieder (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: code, tables, ui, labels, forms, utilitarian, technical, neutral, typewriter, alignment, legibility, utility, consistency, geometric, rounded, open apertures, uniform stroke, crisp terminals.
This font presents clean, monoline letterforms with broad proportions and a steady, grid-like rhythm. Curves are drawn with smooth, near-geometric rounds, while straight strokes stay even and unmodulated, producing a consistent texture across lines. Counters are generally open and simple, with clear joins and minimal shaping; terminals appear crisp and uncomplicated. Numerals follow the same straightforward construction, reading clearly at text sizes and keeping spacing uniform across characters.
It works well where alignment and predictable spacing matter, such as code snippets, tabular data, forms, and system or UI text. The clear, steady shapes also suit labels, captions, and technical documentation where a neutral tone and consistent rhythm are preferred.
The overall tone is practical and no-nonsense, leaning toward a technical, tool-like voice rather than expressive display. Its even color and measured rhythm evoke a typewriter/terminal sensibility—neutral, dependable, and suited to information-forward typography.
The design appears intended to provide a straightforward, highly consistent reading experience with an emphasis on uniform rhythm and clarity. Its construction favors predictable spacing and simple, durable shapes that perform reliably in functional text contexts.
In running text the design maintains a stable cadence, with rounded forms (like O, e, and c) staying smooth and restrained while diagonals (like V, W, and Y) keep a firm, structured presence. The sample shows clear separation between characters and a consistent baseline presence, supporting legibility in dense settings.