Sans Faceted Guby 9 is a very light, narrow, low contrast, italic, tall x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logotypes, ui labels, tech branding, futuristic, technical, sci‑fi, angular, aerodynamic, tech aesthetic, sci‑fi voice, geometric clarity, display impact, interface clarity, faceted, geometric, monoline, octagonal, chamfered.
A slanted, monoline sans built from straight segments and crisp chamfered corners, replacing curves with planar facets. Letterforms are compact and upright in structure despite the consistent forward lean, with squared counters and clipped terminals that create an octagonal rhythm across the alphabet. Strokes stay even in thickness and maintain clean joins, giving the design a precise, engineered texture. Numerals echo the same faceted construction, with hard angles and squared bowls that keep the set visually uniform.
Best suited to headlines, titles, posters, and brand marks where its angular construction can read clearly at medium to large sizes. It also works well for interface labels, product names, and on-screen graphics that benefit from a technical, geometric voice.
The sharp, segmented construction reads as futuristic and instrument-like, evoking display typography seen in tech interfaces and science-fiction graphics. Its forward lean adds motion and urgency, while the consistent geometry keeps the tone disciplined and schematic rather than expressive or calligraphic.
The font appears designed to translate a geometric, faceted motif into a legible sans, prioritizing sharp corners, consistent stroke weight, and a streamlined forward-leaning stance. The goal is likely a modern, sci-fi-leaning display face that feels precise and engineered while remaining readable across a full basic alphanumeric set.
The faceting creates distinctive silhouettes in rounded characters (such as C, G, O, and S), and the overall spacing feels tuned for display clarity rather than dense text setting. The design’s repeated chamfers and straight-edge curves give it a cohesive, modular personality across uppercase, lowercase, and figures.