Sans Faceted Ormo 3 is a regular weight, narrow, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui labels, signage, packaging, posters, branding, techy, futuristic, industrial, utilitarian, precise, compact clarity, tech aesthetic, systematic geometry, display utility, angular, faceted, octagonal, monoline, geometric.
A compact geometric sans built from straight strokes and clipped corners, replacing curves with small planar facets. The drawing is essentially monoline, with consistent stroke thickness and crisp joins that create a subtly octagonal skeleton—most evident in bowls, counters, and the round characters. Proportions are condensed with tight sidebearings, producing a brisk rhythm in text, while vertical stems and simple terminals keep forms clean and mechanical. The lowercase remains straightforward and legible, with open apertures and minimal modulation, and the numerals follow the same chamfered geometry for a unified set.
Well-suited to interface labels, dashboards, and product environments where compact width and crisp geometry help keep information dense and tidy. It can also serve effectively in headlines, posters, packaging, and tech-forward branding where an angular, machined aesthetic is desired, especially at medium to large sizes where the chamfered details are clearly visible.
The overall tone is technical and futuristic, evoking engineered surfaces, digital readouts, and industrial labeling. Its sharp chamfers and disciplined spacing feel efficient and no-nonsense, with a slight sci‑fi edge that reads as contemporary rather than playful.
The design appears intended to translate a geometric sans into a faceted, manufactured look—retaining clarity and everyday usability while adding a controlled, hard-edged character. Its consistent chamfers and restrained construction suggest a focus on systematized shapes that feel ready for digital, industrial, or architectural contexts.
Faceting is handled consistently across caps, lowercase, and figures, giving the face a distinctive ‘cut’ silhouette without resorting to decorative details. In longer lines the condensed build increases information density, and the uniform stroke weight helps maintain even color across mixed-case text.