Sans Faceted Lyty 7 is a bold, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Nue Archimoto' by Owl king project (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: logotypes, headlines, posters, packaging, sports branding, techy, industrial, sporty, retro, geometric impact, technical voice, modular consistency, angular character, chamfered, octagonal, blocky, compact, geometric.
A heavy, monoline display sans with chamfered corners and faceted, near-octagonal outer shapes that replace most curves. Strokes maintain a consistent thickness, with squared terminals and crisp internal counters that often echo the same clipped geometry. Proportions feel compact and sturdy, with wide shoulders on forms like M and W and simplified diagonals that keep letterforms tight and mechanical. Numerals follow the same cut-corner construction, producing a cohesive, modular texture in both caps and lowercase.
Best suited to short, high-impact settings where its angular silhouette can be appreciated—logos, headings, posters, labels, and bold UI moments such as dashboards or overlays. It performs especially well when the design calls for a technical or industrial flavor, or when a compact, athletic display voice is needed.
The overall tone is engineered and assertive, suggesting machinery, hardware, and technical interfaces. Its faceted construction and dense rhythm also lean into a sporty, varsity-adjacent energy, delivering a confident, no-nonsense presence that reads as modern-retro rather than delicate or neutral.
The design appears intended to translate a strict geometric idea—clipped corners and planar facets—into a unified alphabet that feels solid and contemporary. It prioritizes a consistent, modular construction over calligraphic nuance, aiming for strong recognition and a distinctive texture at display sizes.
Lowercase forms are intentionally simplified to harmonize with the caps, giving running text a strong, uniform color at larger sizes. The consistent chamfer motif is a defining signature: corners, joints, and even counters frequently resolve into clipped angles, creating a distinctive ‘cut’ silhouette.