Sans Faceted Rysa 1 is a bold, normal width, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, album art, headlines, flyers, game titles, edgy, hand-cut, punk, playful, energetic, diy texture, display impact, expressive slant, cutout aesthetic, angular, faceted, chiseled, irregular, jagged.
A jagged, faceted sans with sharp planar strokes that replace curves with clipped angles and broken arcs. Letterforms are slightly slanted with uneven stroke endings, creating a hand-cut, collage-like texture. Proportions are intentionally inconsistent across glyphs, with variable widths and bouncy baselines that add movement in running text. Counters are often polygonal and partially open, and terminals frequently taper into wedge-like points that emphasize the fractured, angular construction.
Best suited for display applications where texture and attitude are assets: posters, flyers, event branding, album/cover art, and game or comic-style titles. It also works well for short pull quotes, labels, and packaging accents where an edgy, handmade feel is desired, but is less appropriate for long-form reading at small sizes.
The overall tone is rebellious and kinetic, with a DIY, zine-like attitude and a touch of mischievous humor. Its sharp facets and irregular rhythm read as loud and expressive rather than refined, giving it a gritty, street-poster energy while staying legible at display sizes.
The design appears intended to capture a hand-made, cut-and-shape aesthetic—like letters carved or torn from rigid material—while keeping recognizable sans structures for readability. Its slant, faceting, and irregular rhythm aim to deliver character and immediacy, prioritizing expressive impact over typographic neutrality.
In the sample text, the strong silhouette and frequent diagonal cuts create high visual noise that can build a dense texture in paragraphs, while single words and short phrases stay punchy and distinctive. Numerals follow the same cut-paper geometry, maintaining a consistent, angular voice across letters and figures.