Sans Faceted Abdil 7 is a bold, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, sports branding, packaging, industrial, sporty, tough, retro, mechanical, impact, geometric styling, industrial feel, display clarity, octagonal, chamfered, angular, blocky, stencil-like.
A heavy, all-caps-forward sans with sharply chamfered corners that turn curves into faceted planes. Strokes stay consistently thick, producing a solid, poster-like color with minimal contrast. Counters are compact and often octagonal (notably in O/0, D, P, R), while terminals are square and clipped, reinforcing a machined, modular rhythm. Lowercase echoes the same geometry with simplified joins and a sturdy, compact stance, keeping texture even in running text.
Best suited to headlines, branding marks, and short display lines where the faceted silhouettes can read clearly and set a strong tone. It works well for sports-related graphics, industrial or tech-themed packaging, event posters, and signage-style applications that benefit from a bold, cut-corner aesthetic.
The faceted construction and hard corners give the face a rugged, utilitarian attitude that reads as mechanical and no-nonsense. Its blocky silhouettes suggest sports and equipment graphics, while the clipped angles add a retro, arcade/industrial flavor rather than a soft contemporary feel.
The design appears intended to translate a sturdy sans structure into a faceted, manufactured look by systematically replacing curves with angled cuts. The goal is impact and recognizability, prioritizing strong shapes and consistent geometry over delicate detail.
Numerals are built to match the displayy geometry, with an octagonal 0 and similarly cut 6/8/9 that maintain consistency at large sizes. The angular treatment can make letterforms feel tight in dense settings, but it also creates a distinctive, uniform pattern that holds up well for short bursts of text.