Sans Faceted Miju 4 is a bold, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, sports branding, packaging, industrial, athletic, military, retro tech, posterish, impact, machined look, signage, team identity, retro futurism, chamfered, angular, geometric, blocky, stenciled feel.
A sharply angular display face built from straight strokes and clipped corners, replacing curves with chamfered facets. Letters are heavy and compact with squarish counters and small ink-trap-like notches at joins, producing a crisp, cut-metal silhouette. Terminals are flat and abrupt, diagonals are clean and steep, and rounded forms (O, C, G, Q, 0) read as octagonal shapes. Spacing feels sturdy and slightly tight, with a consistent, mechanical rhythm across caps, lowercase, and numerals.
Best used at display sizes where the chamfered corners and internal notches stay clear—headlines, poster titling, logos/wordmarks, and bold labeling. It can also work for short UI labels or wayfinding-style text when set with generous size and spacing, but the dense, faceted detailing is not optimized for long reading.
The overall tone is tough and utilitarian, evoking signage cut from plate, scoreboard lettering, or industrial labeling. Its faceted geometry reads assertive and engineered rather than friendly, with a retro-technical edge that suits bold statements.
The design appears intended to translate a cut, machined aesthetic into a robust text silhouette, emphasizing angular construction and consistent facets across the character set. It aims to deliver a strong, technical voice with high impact and clear structural repetition.
Lowercase maintains the same faceted construction as caps, with simplified, boxy bowls and minimal modulation; the single-storey a and g keep the system coherent. Numerals follow the same octagonal logic, with 0 and 8 featuring prominent internal facets, reinforcing a techno-signage feel.