Sans Faceted Hulet 1 is a light, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui labels, wayfinding, posters, branding, packaging, technical, geometric, skeletal, futuristic, diagrammatic, geometric system, technical voice, constructed curves, modern display, angular, faceted, monoline, open counters, chamfered.
This typeface uses a monoline construction with curves rendered as straight segments, producing consistent faceted arcs across bowls and rounds. Strokes terminate with clean, squared ends and occasional chamfer-like corners, giving letters a drafted, polygonal feel. Proportions are compact and efficient, with open apertures and simplified joins that keep forms legible even with the angular modulation. Numerals follow the same segmented logic, with rounded figures built from short planes and a generally even rhythm across the set.
It suits interface labels, diagrams, and product marking where a geometric, engineered voice is desired. At larger sizes it becomes a distinctive display option for posters, titles, and branding systems that lean into angular geometry. It can also work for short passages and captions when you want a clean sans tone with an intentional faceted texture.
The overall tone reads technical and modern, like lettering derived from plotting, wireframes, or low-poly geometry. Its crisp facets and restrained construction suggest precision and a mildly futuristic character without becoming decorative or whimsical.
The design appears intended to translate a sans-serif skeleton into planar geometry, replacing smooth curves with short straight segments to create a consistent faceted signature. The goal seems to balance clarity with a constructed, tech-forward texture that remains systematic across letters and numerals.
Round letters (such as O, C, G, Q and 0/8/9) emphasize the font’s signature: polygonal “curves” that create a subtle sparkle along the outline. The lowercase shows a similar economy of form, with single-storey shapes and straightforward terminals that reinforce the utilitarian, constructed aesthetic.