Sans Faceted Hedi 13 is a light, very narrow, low contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: display, headlines, posters, game titles, fantasy branding, runic, angular, ritual, hand-carved, enigmatic, evoke runes, carved look, thematic display, inscribed aesthetic, monoline, geometric, spiky, gothic, irregular.
This typeface is built from straight, faceted strokes that replace curves with sharp angles and pointed terminals. Stems read as monoline with crisp joins, producing a dry, chiseled texture and a slightly irregular rhythm from glyph to glyph. Counters are often diamond- or wedge-like, and several forms use open, angular bowls that keep the silhouettes lean and prismatic. Overall spacing and widths feel intentionally uneven, reinforcing a hand-cut, constructed appearance while remaining consistently upright and clean-edged.
Best suited for display settings such as titles, logos, and short headlines where the faceted silhouettes can be appreciated. It works particularly well for fantasy, mythology, or occult-adjacent branding, as well as game UI headings and poster typography. For paragraphs, larger sizes and relaxed spacing help maintain clarity.
The tone is archaic and mysterious, evoking inscriptions, runes, and carved marks rather than modern neutrality. Its sharp geometry and spiked terminals give it an edgy, ritual or fantasy-leaning voice that feels secretive and dramatic without becoming ornate.
The design appears intended to translate a carved or runic aesthetic into a coherent Latin alphabet, prioritizing angular construction and distinctive silhouettes over conventional text smoothness. Its consistent use of straight segments and pointed terminals suggests a deliberate, gem-cut or inscription-like theme aimed at expressive display typography.
In longer lines, the repeated angular motifs create a distinctive zigzag rhythm that reads best when given generous tracking and ample line spacing. The numeral set follows the same faceted logic, with diagonal cuts and pointed joins that match the alphabet’s prismatic language.