Sans Faceted Poze 3 is a light, normal width, low contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: logos, posters, game ui, title cards, packaging, edgy, runic, handmade, angular, enigmatic, thematic display, handmade feel, carved look, distinctive voice, faceted, chiseled, spiky, irregular, monoline.
A sharply angular, faceted sans with monoline strokes and pointed terminals throughout. Curves are consistently replaced by planar bends, producing diamond-like counters and zigzag joins in letters such as O, Q, and S. The overall texture is slightly uneven and hand-drawn in rhythm, with subtly shifting stroke angles and widths from glyph to glyph. It reads with an italicized forward lean and a compact lowercase presence, creating a quick, slanted line of text with lively, jagged contours.
Best suited to short-form, high-impact typography such as logos, posters, title sequences, game UI headings, and thematic packaging where a sharp, faceted voice is desirable. It works well for fantasy, occult, or adventure-themed branding and can add a hand-crafted edge to signage-style compositions. For long passages, it is more effective as an accent or for brief blurbs than for continuous reading.
The font conveys a cryptic, rune-like energy—part handmade signage, part fantasy artifact. Its sharp geometry and skewed stance feel restless and edgy, suggesting mystery and a touch of danger rather than neutrality. The angular sparkle of the forms gives it a distinctive, game-like or mythic tone.
The design appears intended to translate a carved or chiseled feel into a clean sans framework, replacing curves with consistent facets and maintaining a brisk italic slant. Its controlled monoline structure keeps the set cohesive while allowing enough irregularity to preserve a hand-made, expressive personality.
Letterforms favor open, simplified construction and prominent corner breaks, which creates strong silhouettes at display sizes. Numerals and capitals are especially emblematic, leaning into diamond and wedge motifs; in longer text the irregularity adds character but can reduce smooth readability compared to more even grotesques.