Sans Faceted Abdil 5 is a bold, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Infield' by BoxTube Labs, 'Manufaktur' by Great Scott, 'Flintstock' by Hustle Supply Co, and 'Evanston Tavern' and 'Refinery' by Kimmy Design (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, sports branding, labels, packaging, industrial, sporty, retro-tech, assertive, mechanical, impact, signage, numbering, tech aesthetic, ruggedness, octagonal, chamfered, angular, blocky, stencil-like.
A compact, heavy sans with sharply chamfered corners and faceted construction that replaces curves with flat planes. Strokes are consistently thick and mostly monoline, creating a strong, even color in text. Counters tend toward squared and octagonal forms, and round letters like O/C/G are built from straight segments, giving the face a mechanical geometry. Terminals are blunt and rectangular, spacing is fairly tight, and the overall rhythm is rigid and modular with a slightly condensed feel in many capitals.
Best suited to headlines, titles, and short bursts of text where its faceted geometry can read as a stylistic feature. It works well for sports-themed graphics, industrial or technical branding, product labels, packaging, and interface callouts that benefit from a strong, engineered look.
The faceted, octagonal shapes evoke industrial labeling, sports numbering, and retro digital hardware aesthetics. Its tone is confident and utilitarian—more about impact and clarity than warmth—suggesting toughness and engineered precision.
The design appears intended to translate the look of chamfered metal plates or octagonal digital/sports lettering into a coherent text face. By enforcing planar facets and squared counters across the set, it aims for high impact, consistent texture, and immediate recognition in display settings.
The uppercase set feels especially uniform and sign-like, while the lowercase introduces some distinctive angular joins and simplified bowls that keep the pixel/plate-cut impression consistent. Numerals are sturdy and display-friendly, with the same clipped-corner logic, supporting strong at-a-glance recognition in short strings.