Typewriter Fiba 4 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height, monospaced font.
Keywords: typewritten notes, posters, packaging, labels, book covers, nostalgic, quirky, analog, crafty, casual, typewriter feel, aged texture, human warmth, retro utility, printed ephemera, rounded serifs, inked, soft terminals, blunt, worn.
A monospaced, serifed design with soft, bracket-like feet and rounded, ink-trap-like joins that create a subtly blotted texture. Strokes stay fairly even, with gentle swelling at curves and terminals, giving the letterforms a slightly stamped or inked feel rather than crisp, geometric precision. Counters are open and simple, and the overall rhythm is steady and mechanical, but with intentionally irregular, softened edges that keep it from feeling rigid.
Works well for headings, short paragraphs, and UI or print contexts where a typewritten voice is desired—such as editorial pull quotes, zines, menus, labels, and packaging. The monospaced structure also suits code-like layouts, tables, and forms when a warmer, more characterful look is preferred over a clinical mono.
The tone is retro and analog, evoking typed documents, labels, and ephemera where impression and ink spread become part of the character. It reads as friendly and slightly scruffy—more personal and handcrafted than strictly utilitarian.
Likely drawn to recreate the imperfect impression of mechanical typing—uniform character width paired with softened serifs and inked terminals to suggest real-world wear, ink spread, and paper texture. The goal appears to be legible, orderly text with a distinctly vintage, humanized surface.
Uppercase and lowercase share a consistent, sturdy silhouette with minimal flourish, while numerals maintain the same stamped texture and width for aligned settings. Spacing is disciplined, but the softened terminals and small inconsistencies add a lived-in quality that becomes more apparent in longer text samples.