Sans Faceted Lafy 11 is a light, very wide, medium contrast, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, branding, posters, ui display, tech packaging, futuristic, technical, digital, modular, geometric, sci‑fi feel, technical clarity, modular construction, display impact, angular, chamfered, segmented, octagonal, monoline.
A faceted, geometric sans built from straight strokes and crisp chamfered corners, with curves consistently replaced by angled segments. The drawing is light and mostly monoline, with small joints and occasional breaks where segments meet, creating a modular, constructed feel. Counters trend toward squarish-octagonal forms, and terminals are flat and clipped rather than rounded. Proportions are extended horizontally, while the lowercase maintains a large x-height and compact ascenders/descenders, giving dense, even texture in text despite the segmented construction.
Best suited to short display settings where its angular segmentation can be appreciated—headlines, logotypes, posters, product packaging, and interface/overlay typography for tech-forward themes. It can work for brief text at comfortable sizes, but the fine strokes and small joins favor on-screen or print use where resolution is sufficient.
The overall tone is clean and sci‑fi leaning, evoking digital displays, industrial labeling, and engineered interfaces. Its sharp facets and segmented joins suggest precision and machinery, reading as contemporary and slightly cybernetic rather than friendly or humanist.
The design appears intended to translate a digital, panel-built aesthetic into a coherent alphabet: planar facets stand in for curves, and consistent chamfers unify the set. The goal reads as a modern, engineered sans with strong stylistic identity and a distinctly technical rhythm.
The uppercase is more schematic and emblematic, while the lowercase is simplified for continuity in running text; the two share the same chamfered geometry and stroke rhythm. Diagonals (as in K, M, N, V, W, X, Y, Z) are straight and assertive, reinforcing the technical cadence and the “assembled from parts” impression.