Sans Normal Bumot 3 is a regular weight, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height, monospaced font visually similar to 'Centra Mono' by Monotype (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: code, ui labels, tables, data display, forms, utilitarian, technical, minimal, systematic, modern, clarity, alignment, character differentiation, neutrality, readability, rounded, geometric, high-contrast-free, open apertures, single-storey a.
This font presents clean, monoline letterforms with a straightforward, geometric construction. Curves are broadly rounded and consistent in radius, while terminals are crisp and largely horizontal or vertical, producing a tidy, engineered silhouette. Uppercase shapes lean toward simple archetypes (circular O, straight-sided H/E/F), and lowercase features a single-storey “a” and an open, readable “e,” reinforcing a contemporary, no-nonsense feel. Spacing is disciplined and even, with a steady rhythm across letters and numerals that keeps words looking orderly in continuous text.
It suits interfaces, dashboards, tables, and settings where alignment and consistent character widths aid scanning. The plain construction and clear digit design also work well for code, logs, terminal-style readouts, and compact UI labeling where legibility at small sizes is important.
The overall tone is functional and technical, with a calm, modern neutrality. Its consistent stroke and measured rhythm evoke system UI typography, coding environments, and other contexts where clarity and predictability are valued over expressiveness.
The design appears intended to provide a highly consistent, dependable reading texture with strong character differentiation and a restrained, modern voice. It prioritizes clarity, alignment, and repeatable geometry to perform well in practical, information-forward typography.
Distinctive, easily separated forms—such as the dotted zero and the simple, unembellished punctuation in the sample—support quick character recognition. The round-heavy construction (notably in C/G/O/Q and the numerals) adds a mild friendliness without losing the structured, utilitarian character.