Sans Faceted Itmo 8 is a regular weight, wide, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, branding, posters, gaming ui, sports graphics, futuristic, technical, sporty, aggressive, digital, futurism, speed, precision, tech branding, display impact, angular, faceted, chamfered, octagonal, forward-leaning.
This typeface is built from crisp, faceted strokes that replace curves with short planar segments, creating an octagonal, machined silhouette throughout. Terminals are sharply cut with consistent chamfers, and joins stay tight and geometric, producing a clean, engineered rhythm. Proportions are horizontally generous with extended bowls and wide counters, while the forward slant and squared-off curves keep the texture taut and directional. Numerals and capitals share the same hard-edged construction, giving the set a uniform, modular feel.
Best suited for display settings such as headlines, logos, posters, and tech-leaning packaging where its faceted geometry can read clearly. It also works well for esports and sports graphics, motion titles, and UI labels that benefit from a fast, technical tone. For longer text, larger sizes and slightly relaxed spacing help preserve clarity.
The overall tone reads modern and high-tech, with a sense of speed and precision. Its sharp facets and oblique stance suggest performance contexts—racing, gaming, interfaces—where an assertive, engineered voice fits. The style feels more industrial than friendly, emphasizing control, motion, and edge.
The design appears intended to translate a geometric sans into a faceted, industrial idiom, prioritizing a sharp, aerodynamic profile over softness. By standardizing chamfered corners and planar pseudo-curves, it aims to deliver a cohesive, futuristic voice that remains legible in short bursts of text while projecting speed and precision.
The faceting is applied consistently across rounded forms (such as O/C/G and 0/8/9), which helps maintain coherence at larger sizes where the planar cuts are most visible. The tight, angular apertures and squared counters create a distinctive texture that can become visually busy if set too small or too tightly tracked.