Sans Faceted Lyta 1 is a regular weight, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Rigid Square' by Dharma Type (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: ui labels, signage, headlines, logos, packaging, techno, industrial, futuristic, utilitarian, sporty, geometric system, modernization, technical tone, brand distinctiveness, octagonal, chamfered, angular, geometric, stencil-like.
A geometric sans with faceted, chamfered corners that replace most curves with short straight segments. Strokes are even and clean, with square terminals and consistent edge angles that give bowls and rounds an octagonal feel. Counters stay open and legible, and the overall construction favors simple, engineered shapes; details like the angled joints in S/C/G and the octagonal O/0 unify the set. Proportions read as balanced and practical, with slightly compact rounds and straightforward, modular numerals.
Works well for interface labels, dashboards, wayfinding, and product or equipment marking where a crisp, engineered voice is desired. It also suits headlines, team or event branding, and packaging that benefits from a modern, technical edge without sacrificing straightforward readability.
The sharp planar cuts and uniform rhythm create a technical, machine-made tone that feels contemporary and slightly sci‑fi. It suggests precision and fabrication—more tool-like than expressive—while remaining friendly enough for everyday UI and labeling.
Likely designed to deliver a clean sans foundation with a distinctive faceted geometry, creating a recognizable “cut-corner” motif across letters and numbers. The consistent chamfering reads as a deliberate system meant to convey modernity, precision, and a fabricated aesthetic while staying broadly usable in display and short-text contexts.
The sample text shows strong clarity at display sizes, where the faceting becomes a defining texture; at smaller sizes the corner cuts may read as a subtle pixel/industrial accent. Figures and capitals feel particularly cohesive thanks to repeated chamfer angles and squared curves, making the font well-suited to systematic typographic palettes.