Sans Faceted Orba 3 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logos, posters, packaging, signage, techy, industrial, futuristic, utilitarian, sporty, geometric styling, technical tone, distinctive branding, modular construction, faceted, chamfered, angular, octagonal, monolinear.
A monolinear sans with faceted geometry: curves are consistently replaced by straight segments and chamfered corners, producing octagonal bowls and crisp terminals. Strokes keep an even thickness with minimal modulation, and the drawing favors square-ish counters and tight interior angles. The uppercase reads as clean and constructed, while the lowercase keeps the same angular logic, with simplified forms and firm, straight-sided stems. Numerals echo the same cut-corner construction, giving the set a cohesive, engineered rhythm.
Best suited to headlines, branding, and short-to-medium text where the faceted detailing can be appreciated. It works well for tech products, industrial themes, athletic or performance-oriented graphics, packaging, and signage or wayfinding where a constructed, engineered look is desirable.
The faceted construction and cut corners lend a technical, industrial tone with a subtle sporty edge, reminiscent of equipment markings and modern tech branding. It feels precise and purposeful rather than expressive, projecting efficiency, control, and a contemporary, digital-forward attitude.
The design appears intended to translate a geometric sans into a cut-corner, planar language that reads modern and manufactured. By systematically replacing curves with facets and keeping stroke weight even, it aims for a distinctive, reproducible aesthetic that feels technical and cohesive across letters and numerals.
The repeated chamfers create strong visual consistency across rounds (C, G, O, Q and related lowercase), and the overall texture stays crisp at display sizes. In longer text, the angular joins and squared counters add a distinctive patterning that can become a defining stylistic cue, especially in headings and UI labels.