Sans Faceted Heny 10 is a light, very narrow, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, packaging, signage, technical, futuristic, industrial, minimal, retro, space-saving, modern display, technical styling, geometric clarity, angular, condensed, geometric, faceted, wireframe-like.
A condensed, monoline sans with squared shoulders and faceted corners that substitute gentle curves with small planar breaks. Strokes remain even and open, with tall proportions and generous vertical emphasis, producing an airy color despite the narrow set width. Counters are simple and geometric, terminals are clean and mostly flat, and round forms (like O/C/G) read as rounded rectangles with clipped edges. Overall spacing is restrained and consistent, supporting a crisp, high-contrast silhouette at display sizes.
Best suited to display applications where its condensed geometry can stand out: headlines, posters, product branding, and packaging. It also works well for signage, UI labels, and technical or sci‑fi themed graphics where tight horizontal space and crisp forms are desirable. For extended small-size reading, the narrow proportions may benefit from slightly increased tracking.
The typeface projects a technical, future-leaning tone with a retro digital undercurrent. Its clipped corners and narrow stance feel engineered and utilitarian, suggesting instruments, labeling, and schematic graphics rather than warmth or softness. The rhythm is calm and precise, giving text a streamlined, modernist flavor.
The design appears intended to deliver a streamlined sans optimized for compact, modern display typography, using faceted corner treatments to add character while retaining a clean monoline structure. It balances legibility with a stylized, engineered feel that reads well in short bursts of text and identity work.
Distinctive faceting appears repeatedly at corners and joins, creating a subtle octagonal logic across the set. Numerals follow the same tall, narrow construction, keeping a cohesive texture between letters and figures.