Sans Faceted Hurom 7 is a very light, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, branding, logotypes, posters, ui labels, futuristic, technical, digital, angular, precise, digital aesthetic, sci-fi tone, machined look, geometric clarity, faceted, octagonal, monolinear, stencil-cut, crisp.
A faceted, monolinear sans with planar cuts that replace curves, producing octagonal bowls and segmented arcs throughout. Strokes are consistently thin with sharp terminals, and many joins show deliberate chamfers that create a constructed, multi-piece feel. Uppercase forms read tall and clean, while the lowercase keeps a similarly geometric skeleton with simplified, angular counters; the overall rhythm is even, with small breaks and clipped corners adding texture without heavy decoration. Numerals follow the same segmented geometry, with squared-off turns and flattened curves that keep a cohesive, engineered look.
Best suited to display settings where its angular construction can be appreciated: headlines, posters, tech-forward branding, and logotypes. It also works well for short UI labels, packaging callouts, and signage-style titling where a digital/industrial impression is desired.
The overall tone is futuristic and technical, evoking instrument displays, sci‑fi interface labeling, and precision-made signage. Its crisp facets and controlled repetition give it a cool, machine-built character rather than a humanist or expressive one.
The design appears intended to translate a geometric sans into a faceted, planar system—substituting smooth curvature with clipped segments to suggest digital rendering or machined construction while preserving legibility and a straightforward upright stance.
The faceting is applied consistently across rounds (e.g., O/Q and similar shapes), giving a recognizable "cut metal" silhouette at both display and text sizes. The thin strokes and frequent corner cuts create a slightly spark-like texture in paragraphs, where the segmentation becomes part of the voice rather than disappearing.