Sans Faceted Ofke 11 is a regular weight, narrow, monoline, upright, normal x-height, monospaced font.
Keywords: ui labels, code samples, signage, posters, branding, technical, industrial, retro, mechanical, angular, systematic, futuristic, utilitarian, constructed, retro-tech, chamfered, faceted, octagonal, crisp, geometric.
This typeface is built from straight strokes and clipped corners, replacing curves with beveled, multi-facet joins that read as octagonal or chamfered forms. Strokes are uniform and square-ended, producing a clean, mechanical rhythm with consistent color across lines. Counters and apertures are compact and angular (notably in rounded letters and numerals), and the overall proportions are condensed with a disciplined, grid-like fit that keeps character widths and spacing highly regular. Distinctive details include a single-storey “a,” a compact bowl-and-stem “g,” and a sharply faceted “0” with a vertical inner mark, reinforcing the engineered feel.
It suits interfaces, dashboards, labeling systems, and other contexts that benefit from a rigid, technical voice and predictable spacing. It can also work well for sci‑fi or industrial branding, packaging accents, and display typography where the faceted geometry becomes a primary stylistic feature.
The overall tone is utilitarian and machine-like, with a distinctly retro-tech sensibility. Its sharp planar geometry suggests precision, control, and a rugged, fabricated aesthetic rather than softness or warmth.
The design appears intended to translate a geometric, fabricated look into a highly systematic alphabet, emphasizing repeatable angles and consistent stroke treatment. By swapping curves for chamfers and maintaining a steady cadence, it aims to deliver a distinctive industrial character while remaining orderly and legible in structured layouts.
The faceting is applied consistently across capitals, lowercase, and figures, giving the set a coherent "cut-metal" silhouette. The narrow proportions and tight internal shapes make the font feel dense and purposeful, and the strong vertical stress keeps word shapes crisp and uniform at display sizes.