Sans Faceted Omky 5 is a regular weight, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui labels, signage, headlines, tech branding, packaging, technical, futuristic, industrial, utilitarian, clean, geometric styling, modernization, tech emphasis, curve faceting, faceted, angular, chamfered, geometric, octagonal.
A monoline geometric sans with curves translated into sharp chamfers and planar facets. Round letters like C, G, O, Q, and 0 read as octagonal forms with clipped corners, while straight-sided glyphs keep crisp horizontal and vertical strokes. Terminals are mostly flat and squared, and joins stay clean without visible modulation, producing a consistent, engineered rhythm. Proportions are straightforward and compact, with simple, open counters and clear numeral shapes (notably the faceted 0/8/9 and a straight-stem 1).
Well suited for interface labels, dashboards, wayfinding, and short-to-medium display copy where a crisp, engineered look is desired. It also fits tech-forward branding, product packaging, and posters that benefit from angular geometric texture without resorting to novelty shapes.
The overall tone feels technical and modern, with a subtle sci‑fi and machine-made character. Its faceted construction suggests precision, hardware, and digital interfaces rather than softness or warmth, giving it an assertive, functional voice.
Designed to reinterpret a neutral sans skeleton through systematic chamfering, replacing curves with controlled facets to evoke precision and modernity. The intent appears to balance recognizability and legibility with a distinctive, constructed silhouette that stands out in contemporary technical contexts.
The faceting is applied consistently across both uppercase and lowercase, creating a cohesive set where even traditionally curved lowercase forms (a, e, g, o) retain the same clipped geometry. In running text the angular corners add texture and a slightly pixel-like, constructed feel while preserving legibility through generous apertures and straightforward letterforms.