Sans Faceted Omle 9 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Interval Next' by Mostardesign; 'Agent Sans', 'Clear Sans Screen', and 'Clear Sans Text' by Positype; and 'Bajazzo Variable' by Schriftlabor (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: branding, headlines, posters, packaging, wayfinding, technical, architectural, modern, industrial, rational, geometric styling, technical voice, modern identity, constructed forms, faceted, chamfered, angular, crisp, geometric.
A geometric sans with chamfered, faceted joins that replace fully rounded curves with small planar cuts. Strokes stay largely monolinear, producing clean, even color, while counters tend toward squarish ovals and octagonal forms (notably in O/0 and C/G). Terminals are typically flat and blunt, and the uppercase leans toward constructed, straight-sided geometry; the lowercase follows with compact, sturdy forms and simplified bowls. Overall spacing reads open and orderly, with a slightly engineered rhythm across text.
Best suited to display applications where the angular, engineered detailing can be appreciated—brand marks, headings, packaging systems, signage, and product or UI labeling. It can also serve short text passages when a crisp, technical voice is desired, though the faceting will remain a prominent stylistic signature.
The faceted construction gives the face a technical, architectural tone—precise and manufactured rather than humanist or calligraphic. It feels contemporary and utilitarian, with a subtle sci‑fi/industrial edge that comes from the clipped corners and polygonal curves.
The type appears designed to deliver a neutral sans foundation while injecting character through consistent corner faceting, creating a constructed look that reads modern and precise. The goal seems to be a versatile, contemporary voice with an unmistakably geometric, manufactured edge.
The design maintains a consistent facet size across rounds and joins, which helps unify mixed straight and curved structures. Numerals echo the same chamfered treatment, keeping the set cohesive for interface or labeling contexts where letters and digits mix frequently.