Sans Faceted Hudab 9 is a very light, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui text, wayfinding, product labels, tech branding, posters, techy, minimal, futuristic, clinical, geometric, geometric clarity, tech aesthetic, systematic construction, modern signage, monoline, rounded corners, squared bowls, open apertures, extended terminals.
A monoline sans built from straight strokes and squared, faceted curves, with consistently rounded outer corners that soften the otherwise angular geometry. Bowls and counters lean toward rectangles with radiused corners, producing a clean, modular rhythm across uppercase and lowercase. Terminals are typically blunt and horizontal/vertical, while diagonals (A, K, V, W, X, Y) are crisp and evenly weighted. The lowercase shows single‑storey forms (a, g) and simple, open constructions; the numerals follow the same squarish, rounded-rectangle logic with clear, schematic silhouettes.
Works well for UI and app typography, dashboards, and on-screen labels where a clean, engineered aesthetic is desired. It also suits wayfinding, product labeling, and tech-forward branding systems, and can add a futuristic, modular tone to headlines and poster typography.
The overall tone feels modern and technical—like interface lettering or industrial labeling—balancing precision with a slightly friendly softness from the rounded corners. Its restrained forms and predictable geometry read as calm, efficient, and contemporary, with a subtle sci‑fi/retro‑digital flavor.
The design appears intended to translate a geometric, faceted construction into a readable sans for contemporary environments, prioritizing consistency, clarity, and a distinctive squared-round signature. It aims to evoke modern hardware/software aesthetics while remaining neutral enough for practical display and short text.
Distinctive squared-round shapes appear throughout (notably in C, G, O, Q, S, and 0), creating a cohesive “machined” look. The spacing in the sample text appears even and controlled, supporting a steady line texture. The design favors simplified, sign-like letterforms over calligraphic modulation or expressive detailing.