Sans Faceted Ipha 1 is a regular weight, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: display, headlines, branding, logotypes, posters, techno, futuristic, industrial, sci‑fi, mechanical, sci‑fi styling, technical labeling, geometric clarity, industrial tone, angular, chamfered, octagonal, geometric, modular.
A faceted, geometric sans built from straight segments with consistent stroke thickness and frequent chamfered corners. Curves are largely replaced by angled joints, giving bowls and rounds an octagonal, cut-metal feel. Terminals are clean and squared-off, with a slightly technical rhythm created by repeated 45° breaks and compact interior counters. The lowercase keeps the same constructed logic, pairing simple single-storey forms with crisp joins and a tidy, uniform baseline and cap alignment.
Best suited for display use where the angular detailing can be appreciated: headlines, posters, event graphics, game/UI titling, and technology-oriented branding. It can also work for short blocks of text in interfaces or labels when a crisp, engineered look is desired, but its faceting will be most effective in larger sizes and concise copy.
The overall tone reads technical and futuristic, like labeling on equipment or interface typography on a retro-digital display. Its faceted construction suggests precision and engineered surfaces, projecting a cool, utilitarian personality rather than a humanist or playful one.
The font appears designed to translate a futuristic, machined aesthetic into a clear sans structure by substituting curves with planar facets and maintaining a disciplined monoline construction. The intent seems to balance legibility with a distinctive, technical silhouette suitable for modern sci‑fi or industrial themes.
The design relies on a modular, polygonal vocabulary that stays consistent across letters and numerals, helping mixed-case settings feel cohesive. Open apertures and simplified details keep shapes recognizable, while the angular rounds add distinctive character that becomes more pronounced at larger sizes.