Sans Faceted Lity 1 is a regular weight, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: display, posters, headlines, logos, packaging, techno, industrial, retro-futuristic, mechanical, geometric, geometric construction, technical voice, futuristic branding, signage clarity, modular consistency, angular, chamfered, faceted, octagonal, crisp.
A sharply angular sans with faceted, chamfered corners that substitute for curves, giving many glyphs an octagonal, engineered silhouette. Strokes stay consistently even, with clean terminals and mostly squared counters; round forms like O, C, and G are built from straight segments with clipped corners. Proportions are compact and orderly, with a steady cap height and a moderate x-height; the lowercase leans toward simplified, constructed shapes (notably single-storey forms) that echo the uppercase’s polygonal logic. Numerals follow the same cut-corner geometry, producing a cohesive, modular rhythm across letters and figures.
Best suited to display settings where its faceted geometry can be appreciated—headlines, posters, branding marks, and packaging with a technical or futuristic theme. It can also work well for UI-style titling, product labels, and short blocks of text where a clean, engineered voice is desired.
The overall tone feels technical and utilitarian, evoking signage, equipment labeling, and sci‑fi interfaces. Its crisp facets and mechanical construction suggest precision and modernity with a retro arcade/computer flavor rather than a soft, humanist warmth.
The design appears intended to translate a sans skeleton into a planar, cut-corner construction that feels manufactured and contemporary. By replacing curves with consistent facets and keeping stroke weight steady, it aims for a disciplined, system-oriented aesthetic that remains legible while projecting a distinctly technical character.
Diagonal joins and clipped corners create strong internal highlights and a consistent “machined” texture in text. The design emphasizes clarity through geometric differentiation, with distinctive angular forms on letters like J, U, V/W, and the digit set, which helps the face read as purposeful and system-like.