Sans Faceted Wese 4 is a very bold, wide, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, sports branding, merchandise, packaging, industrial, athletic, authoritative, retro, aggressive, impact, ruggedness, machined feel, brand presence, display strength, blocky, angular, chamfered, squared, compact.
A heavy, block-built display face with squared proportions and crisp chamfered corners that replace most curves with planar facets. Strokes are thick and uniform overall, with sharp internal cut-ins and notched joins that create a rugged, machined silhouette. Counters are small and rectangular, apertures are tight, and terminals end in flat slabs or clipped diagonals, giving the letters a dense, emphatic color on the page. Spacing feels sturdy and even, with a slightly mechanical rhythm across caps, lowercase, and figures.
Best suited for short-form, high-impact settings such as headlines, posters, team or event branding, and bold packaging callouts. It performs particularly well when you want a strong, industrial or athletic feel in titles, logos, badges, and large typographic statements.
The faceted geometry and hard edges convey a tough, industrial attitude with a distinctly sporty, poster-like punch. Its compact counters and clipped corners add urgency and impact, reading as assertive and utilitarian rather than friendly or refined. The overall tone leans retro-industrial, reminiscent of stamped metal, varsity block lettering, and bold headline typography.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum visual weight and presence through faceted, machined geometry, prioritizing punchy recognition over delicate detail. Its consistent corner treatment and tight counters suggest a deliberate aim toward rugged display typography for branding and attention-grabbing titles.
Distinctive corner clipping and interior notches provide a consistent motif across the set, helping maintain recognition at large sizes while emphasizing a rugged texture in dense lines of text. The lowercase largely mirrors the uppercase’s squared construction, reinforcing a unified, display-forward voice.