Sans Faceted Orga 7 is a regular weight, narrow, monoline, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: ui labels, signage, posters, branding, packaging, techno, industrial, retro, mechanical, utilitarian, technical tone, geometric system, display clarity, retro futurism, angular, faceted, chamfered, octagonal, crisp.
This typeface is built from straight strokes and clipped corners, replacing curves with planar facets that create an octagonal silhouette in bowls and rounded forms. Strokes are consistently thin and even, with squared terminals and frequent chamfers at joins, giving letters a clean, engineered edge. Proportions are condensed overall with tight internal counters in characters like O, D, and Q, and a compact lowercase that sits low relative to tall ascenders. Spacing appears measured and grid-friendly, producing a steady rhythm in text while keeping a distinctly geometric, corner-cut profile.
It works well for interface labels, dashboards, wayfinding, and product markings where crisp, geometric shapes reinforce a technical message. The distinctive corner-cut forms also suit posters, album/film titles, and brand wordmarks that want a retro-tech or industrial aesthetic, especially at medium to large sizes.
The faceted construction and consistent line work give the font a technical, instrument-like tone that reads as modernist and machine-oriented. It suggests digital interfaces, labelling, and retro-futurist design, with a cool, controlled voice rather than a warm or expressive one.
The design appears intended to translate a geometric sans into a faceted, engineered system: clean monoline strokes combined with chamfered corners to evoke machined parts and digital display logic. The goal seems to be a distinctive, consistent angular texture that remains legible while projecting a technical, futuristic character.
The uppercase set leans toward tall, linear forms, while the lowercase keeps simple, single-storey structures and minimal modulation. Numerals follow the same chamfered logic, maintaining clear differentiation through angular cuts and open shapes.