Sans Faceted Hurur 6 is a very light, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logos, posters, ui labels, branding, techno, futuristic, geometric, schematic, angular, sci‑fi styling, geometric construction, technical tone, display impact, system aesthetic, octagonal, faceted, wireframe, sharp, linear.
A crisp, angular line font built from straight segments and clipped corners, replacing curves with faceted joins. Strokes are consistently thin with open counters and generous internal space, giving the forms a light, airy color. Geometry leans toward octagonal and chamfered shapes, with frequent 45° diagonals and squared terminals that keep edges taut and technical. Overall spacing reads even and orderly, while individual letterforms vary in footprint in a natural, proportional way.
Best suited to display sizes where the thin strokes and faceted details can stay clear—headlines, logotypes, poster titles, album/film graphics, and tech-oriented branding. It also works well for short UI labels, HUD-style overlays, and diagram callouts where an engineered, geometric voice is desired.
The faceted construction and wireframe thinness convey a distinctly futuristic, techno tone—more like plotted signage or a vector UI than handwriting or print tradition. Its sharp corners and modular rhythm feel precise and engineered, suggesting digital systems, sci‑fi interfaces, and minimalist industrial graphics.
The design appears intended to translate a geometric, chamfered construction into a clean sans framework, emphasizing sharp planar facets in place of curves. It prioritizes a distinctive, system-like personality and consistent angular rhythm over neutral text readability.
Diagonal cuts are used repeatedly as a unifying motif (notably in bowls and rounded letters), creating strong stylistic coherence across caps, lowercase, and numerals. The numerals echo the same chamfered geometry, keeping the set visually consistent for labeling and interface-like readouts.