Sans Faceted Poze 4 is a light, normal width, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, game ui, album art, titles, logotypes, runic, handmade, edgy, playful, primitive, carved look, fantasy tone, expressive display, handmade texture, edgy impact, angular, faceted, chiseled, jagged, irregular.
This typeface is built from sharp, faceted strokes that replace curves with straight segments and pointed joins. The letterforms lean forward with a consistent oblique slant, and the stroke endings often terminate in wedge-like points, producing a cut, chiseled silhouette. Proportions are uneven in a deliberate, hand-drawn way, with slight variations in widths and internal spaces that give the texture a lively, irregular rhythm. Counters tend to be small and angular, and many characters show split strokes or kinked joints that emphasize the planar construction.
Best suited for display settings such as posters, titles, branding marks, and entertainment or game-related graphics where a runic, carved, or edgy voice is desired. It can work well for short phrases, headers, and packaging accents, while extended body text may become visually busy at smaller sizes due to the dense angular detail.
The overall tone feels rune-like and scratch-built, combining a primitive, carved impression with a lively, mischievous energy. Its spiky geometry reads as adventurous and slightly aggressive, while the uneven rhythm keeps it informal and expressive rather than rigidly technical.
The design appears intended to evoke carved or scratched lettering through a consistent faceted construction, prioritizing distinctive texture and character over smooth readability. Its forward slant and pointed terminals aim to add motion and attitude, giving designers a striking display option with a handmade edge.
In text, the faceting creates a strong surface texture and a distinctive zig-zag baseline/shoulder pattern, making the font most effective when its angularity can be seen clearly. The digit set follows the same cut-stroke logic, with simplified, segmented forms that match the alphabet’s pointed terminals.