Sans Normal Bolet 10 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height, monospaced font visually similar to 'Arbeit Technik' by Studio Few (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: code, terminal ui, tabular data, forms, labels, technical, utilitarian, modern, neutral, clean, clarity, alignment, system ui, legibility, consistency, mechanical, geometric, rational, structured, sturdy.
A compact, monolinear sans with a clearly monospaced rhythm and even color across lines. Forms are built from straightforward geometry—round counters paired with squared terminals—creating crisp joins and consistent stroke behavior. The lowercase is simple and open, with single-storey shapes (notably the a and g) and minimal modulation, while the uppercase stays broad and steady with clean, unembellished construction. Numerals are plainspoken and balanced, aligning neatly within the fixed character cells and reinforcing the font’s grid-like regularity.
This font suits contexts where alignment and predictable spacing are essential, such as code display, terminal-style interfaces, configuration readouts, and tables. It also works well for utilitarian labeling and UI elements where a steady, grid-consistent texture supports scanning and comparison.
The overall tone is pragmatic and technical, emphasizing clarity and structure over personality. Its fixed spacing and restrained drawing feel orderly and machine-like, giving text a disciplined, no-nonsense presence.
The design appears intended to provide a straightforward, highly legible monospaced sans that remains visually consistent at a range of sizes. Its simplified, geometric letterforms and uniform spacing suggest a focus on functional reading and reliable alignment in technical or system-oriented settings.
Because every character occupies the same horizontal measure, the texture is highly regular and blocky, which can read slightly rigid in longer passages but very controlled in aligned layouts. The design prioritizes consistent counters and clear silhouettes, keeping punctuation and mixed-case text visually stable.