Sans Faceted Ombi 7 is a regular weight, normal width, monoline, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, packaging, logotypes, industrial, angular, techy, edgy, geometric, geometric styling, display impact, modernization, distinct texture, technical voice, faceted, chiseled, crisp, mechanical, hard-edged.
A sharply faceted sans with monoline strokes and corners that resolve into small planar cuts instead of smooth curves. Counters and bowls are built from straight segments, giving rounds like O/C/G and numerals a polygonal, chiseled silhouette. Proportions feel compact and efficient, with open apertures and sturdy verticals; diagonals are clean and consistent, and terminals tend to end flat or at subtle angles. Overall spacing reads even in text, while the faceting introduces a deliberate, constructed texture across words and lines.
Best suited to display contexts where the faceted geometry can be appreciated—headlines, posters, packaging, and brand marks that want a crisp, engineered voice. It can also work for short UI labels or section headers where an angular, technical personality is desired, but the distinctive cornering is most effective at medium-to-large sizes.
The faceted construction and hard corners create an industrial, technical tone—more machine-cut than hand-drawn. It suggests precision, grit, and a slightly futuristic edge, with a confident, no-nonsense rhythm that stands out without becoming decorative.
The design appears intended to translate a neutral sans structure into a hard-edged, polygonal system, replacing curves with controlled facets to produce a modern, constructed look. Its consistent stroke and repeated corner cuts emphasize visual uniformity and a deliberately mechanical character across the set.
Lowercase forms keep the same angular logic as the uppercase, helping the texture stay consistent in mixed-case settings. Numerals echo the polygonal approach (notably 0, 6, 8, 9), reinforcing the geometric theme and making the font feel cohesive across alphanumerics.