Sans Faceted Jily 7 is a regular weight, wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: display, headlines, branding, posters, logotypes, futuristic, tech, geometric, industrial, angular, tech styling, sci-fi voice, geometric system, display impact, brand distinctiveness, faceted, polygonal, chiseled, sharp, modular.
A geometric sans built from straight strokes and crisp planar facets, replacing most curves with angled segments. Stems and diagonals keep an even stroke presence, while corners are consistently chamfered to create a cut, crystalline rhythm. Counters tend toward hexagonal and polygonal shapes (notably in O/C/G and numerals), and joins are hard-edged with minimal rounding. Proportions feel open and slightly extended, with a clean, constructed baseline rhythm and simplified terminals throughout.
Best suited for display settings where the faceted geometry can be appreciated—headlines, posters, branding systems, logotypes, and packaging with a technical or futuristic concept. It can also work for short UI labels or game/film graphics where a sharp, constructed voice is desired, but its angular detailing is most effective at larger sizes.
The overall tone is sci‑fi and engineered, evoking technical interfaces, machinery labeling, and synthetic branding. Its sharp geometry reads as precise and assertive rather than friendly, with a distinctive faceted texture that suggests metalwork, circuitry, or digital worlds.
The design appears intended to translate a clean sans structure into a faceted, polygonal system, prioritizing a consistent angular language across letters and figures. By standardizing chamfered corners and multi-sided counters, it aims to deliver a distinctive techno-industrial signature while keeping letterforms recognizable for headline use.
Distinctive angled construction shows up across the set: rounded letters become multi-sided forms, the S is built from zig-zag facets, and figures like 2/3/5/8/9 adopt polygonal bowls and sharp turns. The uppercase has a strong sign-like presence, while the lowercase keeps the same faceted logic for cohesion, producing a stylized but consistent text color.