Sans Faceted Oflu 8 is a regular weight, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: display titles, posters, logos, signage, ui labels, tech, industrial, angular, futuristic, mechanical, tech styling, geometric construction, modern signage, distinctive display, octagonal, chamfered, stencil-like, geometric, modular.
A crisp geometric sans built from straight strokes and clipped corners, replacing curves with small chamfers and faceted joins. Stroke thickness stays consistent, creating a clean monoline texture, while counters and bowls read as polygonal/octagonal forms (notably in O/0/8 and rounded lowercase like a, c, e). Terminals are flat and squared off, and diagonals are sharp and decisive, giving letters a slightly modular, constructed feel. The lowercase is straightforward and legible, with compact, squared shapes and simplified forms that maintain a steady rhythm in text.
Best suited to short to medium-length display typography where the angular faceting can read clearly—headlines, posters, branding marks, and tech-themed packaging. It also works well for wayfinding-style labels, interface headings, and diagram callouts where a precise, constructed look supports the content.
The overall tone is technical and utilitarian, with a futuristic edge driven by its faceted, engineered geometry. It feels machine-made and precise—more like labeling and instrumentation than handwriting or editorial typography.
The design intention appears to be a clean sans with a distinctive faceted construction—delivering a modern, engineered personality without resorting to decorative effects. By systematically chamfering corners and polygonizing curves, it aims for a consistent, high-contrast silhouette that stays readable while signaling a technical aesthetic.
Numerals follow the same faceted logic, with the 0 rendered as an octagonal ring and the 8 built from stacked polygonal bowls. The cap set has a strong display presence due to its sharp corners and wide, open interior spaces, while the lowercase keeps that same construction for consistent texture across mixed-case settings.