Sans Faceted Page 11 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: display, headlines, branding, posters, packaging, techno, industrial, futuristic, mechanical, game-like, angular branding, tech aesthetic, display impact, systemic geometry, sci-fi flavor, angular, chamfered, octagonal, monoline, geometric.
A geometric, monoline sans built from straight strokes and chamfered corners, giving most counters and outer shapes an octagonal, faceted feel. Curves are largely replaced by short diagonals, creating clipped terminals and consistent corner cuts across uppercase, lowercase, and numerals. Proportions lean compact and sturdy in caps, while the lowercase maintains a tall x-height with simplified forms and minimal modulation, producing a crisp, uniform rhythm in text. Spacing appears even and pragmatic, with open apertures and squared bowls that stay legible while preserving the hard-edged construction.
Best suited for display settings where the angular, faceted silhouettes can carry a strong visual identity—headlines, logos, posters, product/tech packaging, UI labels, and game or sci‑fi themed graphics. It can also work for short passages or captions when a crisp, technical texture is desired, especially at medium to large sizes.
The faceted geometry reads as technical and machine-made, evoking sci‑fi interfaces, industrial labeling, and digital hardware aesthetics. Its sharp, planar silhouettes communicate precision and a slightly retro-futurist, arcade-like tone rather than warmth or calligraphic personality.
The type appears designed to translate a polygonal, cut-metal or panelized construction into a readable sans alphabet, prioritizing consistent chamfered corners and straight-stroke geometry. The aim seems to be a distinctive, tech-forward voice that remains orderly and legible while emphasizing a hard-edged, engineered character.
The design language is highly consistent: repeated corner chamfers and straight-sided bowls unify shapes such as O/Q/0 and the rounded lowercase letters. Numerals mirror the same cut-corner construction, and the overall texture stays clean and grid-friendly, making it well suited to layouts that benefit from strong, graphic letterforms.