Sans Faceted Rolu 8 is a very light, very wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: display, headlines, logotypes, posters, ui titling, futuristic, technical, sci-fi, minimal, architectural, futurism, tech branding, geometric stylization, interface tone, geometric, angular, faceted, open counters, rounded joins.
This typeface is built from thin, even strokes with a geometric, faceted construction that replaces many curves with straight segments and softened corners. Many bowls and rounds read as octagonal or planar shapes, producing a crisp, engineered rhythm. Counters are generally open and airy, with simplified terminals and a consistent, schematic feel across uppercase, lowercase, and numerals. The overall texture is light and spacious, with distinctive polygonal curves giving letters a streamlined, constructed silhouette.
Best suited to display roles where its faceted detailing can be appreciated: headlines, branding marks, packaging titles, event graphics, and sci‑fi or tech-themed posters. It can also work for short UI labels or interface titling where a futuristic aesthetic is desired, while longer text may require generous sizing and spacing for comfortable reading.
The faceted geometry and sparse stroke presence convey a futuristic, technical tone—evoking interfaces, instrumentation, and sci‑fi worldbuilding. Its controlled, modular shapes feel modern and calculated rather than expressive or handwritten, giving it an architectural, design-forward personality.
The design appears intended to translate geometric, polygonal construction into a clean sans framework, emphasizing an engineered silhouette and consistent monoline structure. By facet-cutting traditional curves, it aims to feel contemporary and tech-oriented while maintaining recognizable letterforms across cases and numerals.
The alphabet shows deliberate stylization in rounded letters (e.g., O/C/G) through flattened arcs and planar transitions, reinforcing the polygonal theme. Numerals follow the same design logic, with angularized curves and consistent stroke behavior, helping mixed alphanumeric strings feel cohesive.