Sans Faceted Mihe 11 is a regular weight, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logotypes, posters, sports branding, wayfinding, technical, industrial, sporty, futuristic, utilitarian, geometric clarity, industrial styling, display impact, systematic construction, chamfered, angular, octagonal, crisp, blocky.
This typeface is built from straight strokes with consistent thickness and frequent chamfered corners, replacing curves with short planar facets. The forms feel compact and engineered, with many glyphs taking on octagonal bowls and clipped terminals. Counters are generally open and geometric, and joins stay clean and abrupt rather than rounded. The lowercase follows the same faceted logic, mixing boxy construction with simplified, straight-sided bowls, creating a cohesive, hard-edged texture in text.
Best suited to display settings where its faceted geometry can be appreciated—headlines, posters, branding, and identity work with a technical or athletic slant. It can also support short UI labels or wayfinding-style text when you want a crisp, engineered feel, though the strong angularity makes it more distinctive than neutral for long-form reading.
The overall tone is mechanical and modern, with a rugged, no-nonsense character. Its sharp geometry reads as sporty and technical, suggesting equipment markings, sci‑fi interfaces, and industrial labeling rather than softness or warmth.
The design appears intended to translate a geometric sans into a cut-metal, beveled aesthetic by systematically chamfering corners and flattening curves into facets. The consistent stroke weight and disciplined construction aim for clarity and impact, emphasizing a rugged, manufactured look across letters and figures.
Capitals like O/Q show strongly faceted outlines, while diagonals (V, W, X, Y) are drawn with assertive, straight cuts that reinforce the angular rhythm. Numerals match the same clipped-corner vocabulary, producing a consistent, signage-like set.