Sans Faceted Hehi 1 is a bold, very narrow, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, signage, branding, packaging, industrial, futuristic, authoritative, mechanical, urban, impact, tech tone, space-saving, modernity, angular, condensed, geometric, monoline, squared.
A condensed, monoline display sans built from straight strokes and clipped, faceted corners that substitute for curves. Vertical stems dominate, with rectangular counters and flattened terminals that create a crisp, chiseled silhouette. The rhythm is tight and upright, with compact apertures and a consistent, hard-edged geometry across caps, lowercase, and numerals; diagonals (as in K, V, W, X) feel stiff and engineered rather than calligraphic. Numerals mirror the same squared construction, with simplified shapes and clipped corners for a uniform, utilitarian texture.
Best suited for posters, headlines, and title treatments where its condensed, hard-edged texture can carry impact. It also fits signage, packaging, and brand marks that want a technical or industrial voice, and works well for numbering or labeling systems when a unified, engineered aesthetic is desired.
The overall tone is industrial and futuristic, evoking technical labeling, machinery, and metropolitan signage. Its sharp facets and compressed proportions read as assertive and no-nonsense, projecting a controlled, engineered personality rather than warmth or softness.
This design appears intended to deliver high-impact typography with a sharp, faceted construction that feels machined and modern. By emphasizing verticality, clipped corners, and consistent stroke weight, it aims to stay clean and legible while projecting a distinctly technical, architectural character.
The faceting is especially noticeable where a typical grotesk would round (C/G/S and the bowls of B/D/P/R), giving the face a distinctive cut-metal look. The lowercase maintains a tall, compact profile that keeps word shapes narrow and disciplined, making it visually striking in short bursts but potentially dense at smaller sizes due to tight apertures.