Sans Faceted Idmeh 5 is a very light, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: tech branding, sci‑fi titles, ui headings, posters, logotypes, techy, geometric, futuristic, minimal, geometric construction, futurist tone, systematic consistency, angular reinterpretation, angular, chamfered, wireframe, octagonal, modular.
This typeface is built from straight strokes with consistent line weight and frequent chamfered corners, replacing most curves with short diagonal facets. Letterforms feel constructed on a geometric framework, with octagonal bowls and squared counters that give rounds like O, C, and G a clipped, planar silhouette. Proportions are clean and open, with generous interior space and simple joins that keep the rhythm even across text. The lowercase maintains a similarly engineered structure, with single‑storey forms and compact, angular terminals; numerals follow the same faceted logic for a cohesive alphanumeric set.
Use it for technology-forward identities, science-fiction or gaming titles, and display typography where its faceted geometry can be appreciated. It can also work for UI headings, dashboards, and packaging accents when you want a crisp, schematic feel, while long paragraphs are better handled at larger sizes or with generous leading.
The overall tone is precise and technical, evoking signage, instrumentation, and digital-era geometry. Its faceted outlines suggest a retro-futurist or sci‑fi sensibility while remaining restrained and systematic rather than decorative.
The design appears intended to translate a geometric, faceted construction into a clean sans voice—prioritizing straight segments, chamfers, and consistent stroke behavior to create a coherent, engineered character across the full set.
Because the design relies on thin strokes and sharp corners, it reads best when given sufficient size or contrast against the background; at smaller sizes the faceting can visually dominate and fine details may soften. The consistent construction across caps, lowercase, and figures makes it well-suited to tightly art-directed layouts where a unified, engineered voice is desired.