Sans Faceted Jise 3 is a regular weight, wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logos, posters, interfaces, packaging, techno, sci‑fi, industrial, digital, futuristic, futuristic display, technical branding, interface styling, industrial tone, angular, chamfered, octagonal, modular, geometric.
A geometric, faceted sans built from straight strokes with consistent thickness and sharp chamfered corners in place of curves. Counters and bowls are largely rectangular or octagonal, with frequent 45° cuts that create a crisp, modular rhythm. Terminals are squared-off and the overall spacing feels open, emphasizing a wide, schematic silhouette; diagonals appear primarily as beveled joins (notably in forms like V, W, K, X). The lowercase maintains a simplified, engineered construction with single-storey forms and compact apertures, while numerals follow the same angular, segmented logic.
Best suited for headlines, branding marks, posters, and on-screen UI where a technical, futuristic voice is desired. It also works well for packaging, signage, and labels that benefit from an engineered, angular aesthetic. For long-form text, it’s likely most effective at larger sizes where the faceted details remain clear.
The font reads as technical and futuristic, with a clean, machine-made tone that suggests interfaces, hardware labeling, and sci‑fi display typography. Its sharp facets and disciplined geometry give it an industrial, no-nonsense character—more “system” than “handmade.”
The likely intention is a contemporary display sans that replaces curves with planar facets to evoke digital hardware and sci‑fi industrial design. The consistent monoline construction and repeated chamfers suggest a modular approach aimed at creating a distinctive, system-like texture across letters and numbers.
The design relies on consistent corner cuts and rectilinear counters, producing strong alignment and a distinctly “panelized” texture in words. The faceting is uniform enough to feel like a coherent construction system, which helps keep longer lines legible while still signaling a display-forward personality.