Sans Faceted Idmiw 4 is a very light, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: display, headlines, posters, branding, ui labels, futuristic, technical, minimal, geometric, architectural, futuristic styling, geometric construction, technical clarity, display impact, monoline, faceted, angular, octagonal, wireframe.
A monoline sans with sharply faceted, planar forms that replace curves with short straight segments, often creating octagonal bowls and chamfered corners. Strokes maintain a consistent, hairline-like thickness, and terminals tend to be cleanly cut with occasional angled ends. Proportions are fairly compact with a steady cap height and a mid-range x-height; counters are open and geometric, and diagonals are crisp, giving letters like M, N, V, W, and Y a taut, engineered rhythm. Figures follow the same faceted construction, with segmented 0/8/9 forms and angular joins throughout.
Best suited to display applications where its faceted construction can be appreciated: headlines, short taglines, packaging accents, and brand marks with a technical or futuristic brief. It can also work for UI labeling, dashboards, and diagrammatic or wayfinding-style graphics when set at sufficiently large sizes for the thin strokes to remain clear.
The overall tone feels precise and engineered, with a distinctly sci‑fi and schematic character. Its angular segmentation reads as digital or industrial, suggesting instrumentation, CAD-like labeling, and contemporary tech aesthetics rather than warm, humanist text.
The font appears designed to translate geometric, polygonal construction into a clean sans framework, delivering a consistent chamfered vocabulary across rounds and straights. The intent seems to be a lightweight, high-precision look that evokes digital interfaces and architectural drafting while remaining legible for short-form settings.
The design relies on repeated chamfers and straight segments for consistency, creating a recognizable ‘cut-corner’ silhouette across both uppercase and lowercase. The light stroke weight and open interiors keep the texture airy, while the faceting adds visual activity that becomes more apparent at larger sizes.