Sans Faceted Idlur 7 is a very light, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height, monospaced font.
Keywords: ui labels, terminal display, data tables, technical diagrams, dashboards, technical, retro, schematic, futuristic, precise, digital aesthetic, schematic clarity, geometric system, tech branding, display utility, angular, chamfered, geometric, octagonal, wireframe.
This typeface is built from thin, uniform strokes with crisp chamfered corners that turn most curves into short planar segments. Bowls and rounds (C, G, O, Q, 0, 8) read as octagonal outlines, giving the design a faceted, constructed feel. Proportions are compact and consistent, with generous inner counters and straightforward, mostly orthogonal joins; diagonals (A, K, V, W, X, Y) are clean and sparingly used. The overall rhythm is regular and grid-friendly, with open apertures and minimal contrast creating a clear, linear texture in text.
It works well for interface labeling, console/terminal-style text, tabular data, and diagram annotations where a strict, engineered aesthetic is desired. The crisp, faceted forms also suit short headlines, title cards, and sci‑fi or tech-themed branding accents, especially at medium to large sizes where the chamfers are most apparent.
The faceted outlines and wireframe lightness evoke instrumentation, CAD diagrams, and early digital interfaces. Its tone is cool, engineered, and slightly sci‑fi, with a retro-tech flavor that feels purposeful rather than playful.
The design appears intended to translate geometric, faceted construction into a clean sans text face, prioritizing consistency and a schematic, digital tone. By replacing curves with planar segments and keeping strokes uniformly light, it aims to look precise and machine-drawn while staying readable in continuous text.
Several characters emphasize distinctive, angular constructions—such as the octagonal O/0 and the geometric treatment of S and G—supporting quick identification in tightly set, technical contexts. The design remains consistent between uppercase, lowercase, and numerals, maintaining the same chamfer logic and stroke economy throughout.