Sans Faceted Hemy 6 is a bold, very narrow, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, logotypes, packaging, signage, industrial, art deco, mechanical, architectural, retro, impact, space saving, deco revival, geometric construction, condensed, geometric, angular, faceted, monolinear.
A condensed display sans with a tall, compact stance and a consistent, low-contrast stroke. Curves are frequently replaced by planar facets and clipped corners, creating octagonal bowls and pointed transitions. Terminals are mostly flat and vertical, with occasional sharp notches and tapered joins that give letters a chiseled, engineered feel. Counters are narrow and vertical, and spacing is tight, producing a strong, columnar rhythm in words and lines.
Best suited for headlines, posters, and branding where a compact width and strong vertical rhythm help maximize impact in limited space. It can also work well for packaging and wayfinding-style signage that benefits from an industrial, Deco-leaning voice, especially at medium to large sizes.
The overall tone feels industrial and architectural, with a clear nod to Deco-era signage and machine-age lettering. Its crisp facets and compressed proportions read as confident, utilitarian, and slightly futuristic, suited to bold statements rather than quiet text.
The design appears intended to translate geometric, sign-like construction into a contemporary display sans, using faceted bowls and clipped joins to imply precision and durability. Its narrow proportions and emphatic verticals suggest it was built for attention-grabbing titling and condensed wordmarks.
Round letters like O/Q show multi-faceted outlines, while forms such as W/M use narrow, parallel strokes that emphasize verticality. Numerals follow the same condensed geometry and keep an assertive, sign-paint–adjacent presence at larger sizes.