Sans Faceted Hery 5 is a very light, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height, monospaced font.
Keywords: display, ui labels, posters, headlines, sci-fi titles, tech, futuristic, minimal, geometric, angular, geometric styling, sci-fi tone, schematic clarity, systematic construction, faceted, wireframe, polygonal, crisp, constructed.
This font uses a consistent, single-stroke line with sharp corners and chamfered joins, replacing curves with planar facets. Letterforms are built from straight segments with frequent 45°-like diagonals, creating hexagonal and octagonal hints in bowls and counters (notably in O/0 and C/G forms). Proportions are steady and modular, with open apertures and simplified terminals that read as clipped or squared-off ends. The overall rhythm is even and grid-friendly, with compact punctuation and straightforward, schematic numerals that match the same faceted construction.
Best suited to short display settings where the angular texture can read clearly—titles, headers, interface labels, and techno-themed posters or packaging. It can also work for diagrammatic or schematic styling where a constructed, grid-based voice is desired, but the light stroke and faceting suggest avoiding long passages at small sizes.
The faceted geometry and wireframe-like stroke give the type a technical, futuristic tone, reminiscent of plotted signage or low-poly UI aesthetics. Its sharp, crystalline construction feels precise and engineered rather than expressive, lending a cool, utilitarian character.
The design appears intended to translate a geometric, faceted concept into a clean, systematic alphabet with uniform stroke behavior and consistent corner logic. By substituting curves with clipped planes, it aims for a distinctive, modern silhouette that remains restrained and orderly.
Diagonal strokes are used sparingly but decisively, creating a distinctive zig-zag flavor in letters like S and Z and a pointed, V-shaped logic in U/V/W/Y. Round letters are intentionally polygonized, so the texture stays consistent across caps, lowercase, and figures.