Sans Faceted Posy 19 is a regular weight, narrow, low contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, game ui, album art, rune-like, angular, edgy, ritual, fantasy, thematic display, inscriptional feel, graphic texture, symbolic tone, stylized alphabet, geometric, chiseled, monoline, glyphic, sharp.
A sharply angular, faceted display sans built from straight strokes and crisp corners, with curves largely replaced by planar joins. Stems are mostly monoline with consistent stroke thickness and clean terminals, producing a hard, cut-from-wood or carved-from-stone feel. Proportions are compact and vertical, with tight apertures and frequent triangular counters; several letters use diamond or wedge motifs that create a distinctive, rhythmic texture in words. Numerals follow the same constructed logic, emphasizing diagonals and pointed intersections for a cohesive, symbol-forward set.
Best suited for display settings where its faceted construction can lead the visual identity—titles, posters, logos/wordmarks, game interfaces, and themed packaging. It performs particularly well in short-to-medium lines where the angular rhythm remains legible and intentional, and where the sharp texture can act as a graphic element.
The overall tone reads as runic and ceremonial, with a techno-tribal edge that suggests fantasy signage, ancient inscriptions, or game-world UI. Its aggressive angles and emblematic counters feel mysterious and assertive rather than friendly, lending a dramatic, artifact-like character to headlines and short phrases.
The design appears intended to translate inscriptional, rune-inspired geometry into a usable Latin alphabet, prioritizing a consistent straight-stroke construction and high visual character over conventional text neutrality. Its repeated wedge and diamond motifs suggest a deliberate system aimed at creating a cohesive, emblematic voice across letters and numbers.
Texture becomes quite spiky in continuous text, especially where repeated diagonals and wedge counters stack across adjacent letters. Distinctive diamond shapes (notably in forms like O) and strongly angular diagonals make the font visually memorable but also emphasize pattern over neutrality.