Sans Faceted Pala 5 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui labels, tech branding, display titling, posters, packaging, technical, futuristic, industrial, geometric, utilitarian, tech aesthetic, geometric system, industrial clarity, sci-fi ui, faceted, angular, chamfered, monolinear, octagonal.
A geometric sans with monolinear strokes and distinctive faceted construction: curves are replaced by straight segments with chamfered corners, yielding octagonal rounds in forms like O, C, G, and 0. Terminals are mostly flat and orthogonal, and joins are crisp, creating a clean, engineered silhouette. Proportions read balanced and modern, with open apertures and sturdy counters; diagonals (V, W, Y, X) are straight and sharply meeting. The lowercase follows the same angular logic, mixing rounded-octagonal bowls (a, e, g, o) with simple, upright stems and compact, squared shoulders (m, n, r). Numerals echo the caps with angular construction and clear differentiation, including an octagonal 0 and faceted 8/9.
Well-suited to technology and hardware branding, UI/UX labels, dashboards, and product markings where an engineered, geometric tone is desired. It also works for display titling on posters and packaging, especially in contexts that benefit from a futuristic or industrial aesthetic.
The overall tone is precise and machine-made, evoking CAD drafting, sci‑fi interface lettering, and industrial labeling. Its faceted geometry adds a subtle techno edge without feeling aggressive, keeping the voice pragmatic and contemporary.
The font appears designed to translate a clean sans skeleton into an angular, chamfered system that mimics machined parts and polygonal geometry. The intent seems to be a recognizable techno flavor while preserving practical readability through consistent stroke weight and open internal spaces.
The design maintains consistent chamfers across the set, which helps rhythm and cohesion in text. The faceting is pronounced enough to be a signature detail, but counters stay relatively open, supporting legibility in short passages and UI-style settings.