Sans Normal Omrar 13 is a bold, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height, monospaced font visually similar to 'FF Attribute Mono' and 'FF Attribute Text' by FontFont (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: code ui, terminal, ui labels, data tables, captions, utilitarian, technical, friendly, retro, legibility, consistency, ui utility, coding, rounded, chunky, blocky, compact, sturdy.
A compact, monoline sans with softened corners and broadly rounded bowls, giving it a sturdy, blocky silhouette. Curves are built from near-circular arcs while verticals and horizontals stay straight and even, producing a consistent rhythm across the set. Terminals are generally blunt with slight rounding, and counters are open enough to hold up at smaller sizes. The forms are straightforward and geometric, with a clear, uniform cadence typical of fixed-step lettering.
Well-suited to interfaces where alignment and consistent character spacing matter, such as code editors, terminals, and system-style UI components. Its sturdy shapes and even color also work for data tables, dashboards, labeling, and compact captions where readability and regular rhythm are priorities.
The tone is pragmatic and no-nonsense, with a mildly playful warmth coming from the rounded shaping. It reads as technical and workmanlike rather than elegant, evoking terminal/label aesthetics and a subtle retro computing feel. Overall it communicates clarity, reliability, and a functional simplicity.
The design appears intended as a highly legible, fixed-spacing workhorse with a softened geometric voice. It prioritizes consistency, clear silhouettes, and even texture in continuous lines, aiming to stay readable and steady in utilitarian contexts while avoiding a harsh, overly mechanical feel.
Numerals are large and emphatic, matching the letter weight closely for even texture in mixed alphanumeric strings. The punctuation shown in the sample text sits solidly on the baseline and maintains the same sturdy presence as the letters, supporting dense setting without looking fragile.