Sans Faceted Humig 2 is a very light, wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height, monospaced font.
Keywords: code samples, ui labels, posters, packaging, editorial accents, handmade, geometric, quirky, technical, playful, geometric texture, handmade feel, constructed forms, clean readability, faceted, angular, irregular, skeletal, draft-like.
This typeface is built from thin, angular strokes that replace curves with short planar segments, creating a faceted outline throughout. Stroke endings are mostly blunt and unembellished, with a slightly uneven, hand-drawn regularity that keeps shapes lively while staying consistent. Counters and rounds (like O, C, S, and numerals) read as multi-sided forms rather than smooth arcs, and the overall spacing and rhythm are steady and grid-friendly. The result is a clean, skeletal construction that remains legible while foregrounding its polygonal geometry.
It works well where a crisp, grid-consistent rhythm is helpful—such as code samples, terminals, UI labels, captions, and data-ish callouts. The faceted outlines also make it a strong choice for posters, packaging, and editorial accents where a geometric, crafted texture can carry personality without heavy weight.
The faceted construction gives the face a lightly technical, diagram-like character, tempered by the subtle wobble of handmade drawing. It feels playful and experimental rather than strictly engineered, with a distinctly constructed, low-friction tone suited to modern, DIY, or indie aesthetics.
The design appears intended to translate a hand-drawn, polygonal sketch language into a consistent, grid-compatible text face. By keeping strokes minimal and geometry faceted, it emphasizes constructed form and texture while remaining readable across short to moderate passages.
The uniform cell-to-cell fit and consistent sidebearings create an even cadence in running text, while the angular joins add crisp texture at display sizes. Numerals follow the same polygonal logic, keeping the set visually coherent across letters and figures.