Sans Faceted Orri 4 is a regular weight, wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height, monospaced font.
Keywords: ui labels, headlines, posters, signage, coding, technical, retro, industrial, futuristic, utilitarian, tech aesthetic, system clarity, geometric consistency, retro display, angular, octagonal, chamfered, modular, geometric.
A geometric sans with consistently faceted construction: curves are replaced by straight segments and chamfered corners, creating octagonal bowls and clipped terminals. Strokes are uniform and crisp, with a modular, grid-like logic that keeps counters open and shapes highly regular. The overall set reads clean and mechanical, with straight-sided rounds (O, C, G) and angular joins that emphasize structure over softness.
This style is well suited to interface labels, dashboards, and technical graphics where a mechanical, system-like voice is desired. It can also work effectively for headlines, posters, and signage that benefit from an industrial or futuristic aesthetic, and for code-themed or schematic-inspired layouts where regular spacing and rigid geometry help maintain order.
The faceted geometry gives the font a technical, engineered tone that recalls digital readouts, vector drafting, and sci‑fi interface typography. Its steady rhythm and sharp cornering feel purposeful and utilitarian rather than expressive or calligraphic, projecting a cool, retro-futurist character.
The design appears intended to translate a sans skeleton into a faceted, polygonal vocabulary, prioritizing consistency and a constructed, machine-made feel. By using chamfered corners and straight-segment bowls throughout, it aims to deliver a distinctive techno tone while keeping letterforms straightforward and highly uniform in texture.
In text, the angular bowls and chamfers remain prominent at small to medium sizes, creating a distinctive pixel-adjacent flavor without looking actually pixelated. Numerals follow the same clipped, polygonal logic, producing strong silhouettes that feel consistent with the caps and lowercase.