Sans Faceted Idket 5 is a very light, narrow, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: display, logotypes, posters, headlines, sci-fi ui, futuristic, technical, crystalline, angular, experimental, geometric stylization, sci-fi tone, architectural feel, angular clarity, wireframe effect, geometric, monoline, faceted, wireframe, draftlike.
A slender, monoline sans built from straight segments that break strokes into crisp facets, producing polygonal bowls and sharp joins in place of curves. The forms lean consistently, with long ascenders and a taut, airy color that keeps counters open and emphasizes vertical rhythm. Stroke endings are typically blunt with occasional angled terminals, and several glyphs show asymmetric construction that adds a hand-drawn, plotted feel while remaining systematically geometric.
Best suited to display settings where the faceted construction can be appreciated—titles, posters, album or game branding, and sci‑fi or tech-themed interfaces. It can work for short passages at larger sizes in editorial or packaging contexts, but its airy strokes and angular detailing are most effective when given generous size and spacing.
The overall tone feels futuristic and crystalline—like lettering cut from planes or traced as a wireframe. Its angularity and forward slant convey speed and a technical, schematic mood, making the texture feel modern and slightly experimental rather than friendly or traditional.
The design appears intended to translate sans-serif proportions into a planar, cut‑gem aesthetic, prioritizing a consistent straight-segment grammar over conventional curves. The forward-leaning stance and wireframe-like stroke treatment suggest an emphasis on motion, modernity, and a constructed, engineered feel.
Uppercase and lowercase share the same faceted logic, with lowercase retaining narrow, upright-to-leaning stems and simplified bowls that read as polygon outlines. Numerals follow the same segmented geometry, with easily distinguishable shapes and a consistent use of corners over curves, helping maintain the font’s architectural character in mixed text.