Sans Faceted Orsu 6 is a light, wide, low contrast, upright, tall x-height, monospaced font.
Keywords: code ui, data tables, labels, spec sheets, interface text, technical, industrial, retro, utilitarian, geometric, precision, grid alignment, machine aesthetic, functional text, faceted, angular, octagonal, chamfered, stencil-like.
A monolinear, monospaced sans with crisp chamfered corners that turn bowls and curves into planar, faceted segments. Strokes stay even throughout, with squared terminals and a steady grid-like rhythm that reads cleanly at text sizes. Counters tend toward squarish and octagonal forms, and round characters (like O, C, G, 0) are built from straight-ish facets rather than true curves, giving the design a precise, engineered feel.
Well-suited to contexts where fixed-width alignment and predictable rhythm matter, such as code samples, tables, technical documentation, UI readouts, and labeling systems. The faceted geometry also makes it a strong choice for headings or short bursts of text in tech-leaning branding, posters, and packaging where an engineered aesthetic is desired.
The overall tone feels technical and utilitarian, like labeling on instruments, equipment, or early computer/terminal typography. Its angular construction adds a subtle sci‑fi and industrial edge while staying restrained and readable.
The design appears intended to combine monospaced functionality with a distinct angular voice, replacing curves with chamfers to create a consistent, machine-made geometry. It prioritizes uniformity, alignment, and a clean on-screen or print texture over calligraphic nuance.
Spacing is consistent and disciplined, reinforcing the typewriter/terminal cadence. Numerals and capitals share the same faceted geometry, and the lowercase maintains clear, open forms with a straightforward, workmanlike texture in paragraphs.