Sans Faceted Jiri 6 is a regular weight, wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui labels, headlines, branding, posters, signage, futuristic, techy, geometric, industrial, minimal, modernization, tech aesthetic, geometric clarity, distinctive titling, angular, rectilinear, rounded corners, squared forms, stenciled feel.
A geometric sans built from straight segments and squared bowls, with softened (rounded) outside corners that keep the forms from feeling brittle. Strokes are even and consistent, while counters tend toward rectangular and rounded-rectangle shapes, producing a clean, modular rhythm. Several glyphs replace curves with angled joints and planar breaks, giving letters like V/W/Y/X and many numerals a faceted, engineered look. The overall fit is generous and open, with wide capitals and sturdy, simplified lowercase forms designed for clarity at display and UI-adjacent sizes.
It suits interface titles, navigation labels, and product surfaces where a crisp, engineered tone is desired. The structured geometry also works well for headlines, event posters, and contemporary branding systems that lean toward tech, automotive, or gaming aesthetics.
The font reads as modern and forward-leaning, with a sci‑fi/tech sensibility rooted in geometric construction rather than ornament. Its sharp joins and squared apertures suggest machinery, interfaces, and industrial design, while the rounded corners add a controlled, friendly restraint.
The design appears intended to deliver a contemporary geometric sans with a recognizable, faceted construction—prioritizing clean alignment, consistent stroke behavior, and a modular silhouette that feels at home in modern digital and industrial contexts.
The faceting is used selectively—especially in diagonals and curve substitutions—creating a distinctive signature without overwhelming the texture of paragraph settings. Numerals echo the same squared, segmented logic, supporting a cohesive voice for dashboards and titling.