Sans Faceted Hukiw 15 is a very light, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, branding, posters, packaging, interfaces, futuristic, technical, geometric, sci‑fi, digital, futuristic styling, geometric system, tech aesthetic, display impact, angular consistency, faceted, angular, chamfered, octagonal, wireframe.
A sharply faceted, geometric sans built from straight monoline strokes with clipped corners replacing curves. Bowls and rounds resolve into octagonal/planar segments, producing a crisp, polygonal silhouette across both cases and figures. Proportions are clean and fairly open, with tall ascenders/descenders and simplified terminals that keep the rhythm airy and precise. Numerals follow the same chamfered construction, with especially angular forms for 0, 6, 8, and 9 that read as outlined polygons rather than continuous curves.
This font suits display use where its angular construction can be appreciated—headlines, logos, posters, and title cards for tech or sci‑fi themes. It can also work for UI labels, dashboards, and packaging accents when set at comfortable sizes and with ample tracking, where the faceted outlines remain clear.
The overall tone is cool, engineered, and futuristic—suggesting digital interfaces, sci‑fi worlds, and technical diagrams. Its faceting gives it a constructed, machined feel that reads as modern and slightly experimental while remaining orderly and legible.
The design appears intended to translate a sans skeleton into a planar, chamfered system—minimizing curves while preserving familiar letter structures. The goal seems to be a distinctive, futuristic voice with consistent geometric rules that keep the alphabet unified across upper/lowercase and numerals.
Because the strokes stay thin and corners are frequent, the design emphasizes shape and spacing over mass; it tends to look best when given room to breathe. The consistent chamfering across joins and terminals creates a cohesive ‘cut metal’ or ‘crystal edge’ impression in longer text, where the repeating angles become a distinctive texture.