Sans Faceted Lygi 4 is a bold, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logos, posters, packaging, signage, techy, industrial, futuristic, game-like, assertive, geometric impact, technical tone, modular system, display clarity, octagonal, chamfered, squared, angular, crisp.
A sharply angular, faceted sans with chamfered corners that replace curves with planar cuts. Strokes stay consistent in thickness, producing a solid, blocky color with clean interior counters and clear right angles. Proportions are compact and geometric, with slightly squared bowls and octagonal ‘O’-like forms; diagonals are straight and decisive rather than rounded. The overall rhythm is structured and mechanical, with tight joins and a sturdy, engineered feel.
Best suited to headings and short text where its crisp facets can read as a design feature—such as technology branding, product marks, event posters, or bold packaging. It can also work for signage, labels, and interface-styled graphics where an engineered, geometric tone is desired, while longer passages will feel more intense and utilitarian.
The faceted geometry and hard corners give the font a technical, sci‑fi tone that reads as modern and purposeful. It suggests machinery, digital interfaces, and constructed environments rather than organic or handwritten expression. The voice is confident and utilitarian, leaning toward display impact over softness.
The design appears intended to translate a geometric sans into a faceted, cut-corner construction, prioritizing a uniform, machined aesthetic. By avoiding curves and relying on chamfers and straight segments, it aims for a distinctive, modular look that remains legible while signaling a technical, futuristic attitude.
Several forms emphasize clipped terminals and straight-sided bowls, reinforcing an octagonal motif across letters and numerals. The lowercase maintains the same angular construction as the caps, keeping a consistent, system-like texture in paragraphs. Numerals follow the same faceted logic, making the set feel cohesive in codes, labels, and UI-like strings.