Sans Normal Boley 6 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, ui labels, technical docs, data tables, terminal text, technical, utilitarian, neutral, clean, no-nonsense, clarity, alignment, utility, system-like, geometric, uniform, open apertures, generous spacing, straight-sided curves.
A monospaced, geometric sans with uniform stroke weight and a steady, grid-like rhythm. Letterforms are built from simple straight segments and broad circular curves, producing open counters and clear, unembellished silhouettes. Terminals are mostly blunt and squared, with occasional soft rounding in bowls; joints stay crisp and consistent. The lowercase shows a tall x-height with compact ascenders/descenders, and the overall set maintains even color and predictable spacing across letters and numerals.
Well-suited to code editors, terminal interfaces, and any layout that benefits from strict character alignment such as tables, logs, and configuration screens. It also works for compact UI labels and technical documentation where consistent rhythm and quick scanning are more important than expressive typography.
The tone is functional and matter-of-fact, prioritizing clarity over personality. Its measured proportions and consistent widths evoke coding, technical documentation, and instrumentation, with a calm, neutral presence that stays out of the way.
The design appears intended to deliver a pragmatic monospaced voice with clean geometry and reliable legibility, emphasizing consistency across the character set and predictable spacing for alignment-heavy text.
Capitals read sturdy and architectural, while round letters (C, G, O, Q) keep a near-circular geometry. Numerals follow the same restrained construction, with clear differentiation and steady alignment that supports tabular patterns and code-like layouts.