Sans Normal Byled 3 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Marcher' by Horizon Type, 'LCT Picon' by LCT, 'Camphor' by Monotype, and 'Core Sans NR' by S-Core (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: ui text, web apps, editorial, brand systems, signage, modern, neutral, clean, friendly, functional, clarity, versatility, modernity, neutral voice, system utility, geometric, monoline, open apertures, humanist touch, smooth curves.
A clean, monoline sans with geometric construction and gently rounded curves. Strokes are even and crisp with minimal modulation, producing a calm, consistent texture. Counters are generous and apertures read fairly open, supporting clarity in both caps and lowercase. Terminals are predominantly straight and blunt, while round letters keep smooth, near-circular bowls; overall spacing feels balanced and unforced for continuous text.
Well-suited to user interfaces, dashboards, and web/app typography where even stroke weight and open shapes aid readability. It also works comfortably for modern brand systems, presentations, and general editorial layouts, and can scale to straightforward signage or wayfinding thanks to its clean silhouettes.
The tone is contemporary and straightforward, leaning neutral and practical rather than expressive. Its round forms add a subtle friendliness, but the overall impression stays professional and restrained—suited to interfaces and everyday editorial use where the type should not call attention to itself.
The design appears intended as a dependable, modern sans built around simple geometry and consistent stroke logic. Its emphasis is on clarity and versatility, providing a quiet, contemporary voice for a wide range of everyday typographic tasks.
Capitals appear simple and geometric, with diagonals that feel precise and mechanically consistent. Lowercase forms maintain an orderly rhythm and legibility, with clean joins and clear counters. Numerals match the letterforms in stroke and proportion, reading as tidy and utilitarian for general-purpose data and UI contexts.