Sans Normal Omriz 5 is a bold, wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height, monospaced font visually similar to 'Matahari Sans' by Studio Sun (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: ui labels, code, terminal, data tables, signage, industrial, utilitarian, technical, retro, assertive, alignment, system look, clarity, robustness, labeling, blocky, compact, sturdy, mechanical, uniform.
A heavy, squared sans with strongly uniform strokes and broadly rounded corners that keep the forms friendly while remaining very solid. The design is built on a consistent cell width, producing even rhythm and tightly controlled spacing across words. Curves are simplified into large, smooth arcs, and joins stay clean and blunt, giving counters a compact, engineered feel. Uppercase shapes read as broad and stable, while lowercase maintains clear, simple construction with minimal modulation and straightforward terminals.
Well suited to interfaces, terminals, and other contexts where consistent alignment matters, such as code samples, logs, and tabular data. The sturdy letterforms also work for short headings, badges, and utilitarian signage where a strong, structured voice is appropriate. In longer text, it will produce a deliberate, patterned texture that fits technical or industrial layouts.
The overall tone is practical and no-nonsense, with an industrial, workmanlike character. Its rigid cadence and stout shapes evoke technical labeling and retro computing, while the rounded corners prevent it from feeling harsh. The result feels confident and functional rather than expressive or delicate.
Likely designed to deliver a sturdy, highly consistent typographic texture with clear, simplified geometry and strict character alignment. The intention appears focused on practical readability and system-like regularity, with softened corners to keep the tone approachable.
The numerals are similarly robust and geometric, matching the overall boxy rhythm and making mixed text-and-number strings feel cohesive. The font’s consistent character widths create a pronounced grid-like texture in paragraphs, which can be a feature when a deliberate, structured look is desired.