Sans Faceted Hulaz 1 is a light, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, packaging, branding, ui labels, technical, architectural, playful, retro, futuristic, geometric stylization, tech aesthetic, display impact, clarity, faceted, angular, polygonal, geometric, modular.
A monoline sans built from straight segments that replace most curves with crisp, multi-sided facets. Bowls and rounds (C, G, O, Q, 0, 8) read as polygonal rings, while verticals and horizontals stay clean and even, producing a consistent, diagram-like rhythm. Terminals are blunt and squared-off, and counters are generally open and clear, helping letters like E, F, and T stay legible despite the stylized construction. Lowercase forms keep the same faceted logic, with simplified shoulders and arcs, and numerals follow suit, including a distinctly slashed zero.
Best suited to display settings where its faceted construction can be appreciated—headlines, posters, covers, and brand marks for tech, architecture, gaming, or maker-oriented themes. It can also work for short UI labels or signage where a crisp, constructed look is desired, while longer text may benefit from larger sizes and generous spacing.
The faceted geometry gives the type a constructed, engineered feel—like lettering cut from panels or plotted from vectors. At the same time, the slightly irregular polygonal rounding adds a friendly, game-like character that keeps it from feeling sterile. Overall it balances a techy, sci‑fi mood with a casual, approachable tone.
The font appears designed to translate a clean sans structure into an angular, planar system, emphasizing repeatable facets and a drawn-with-straight-lines aesthetic. The goal seems to be a distinctive geometric voice that remains readable while clearly signaling a technical or futuristic sensibility.
The design relies on repeated angles and consistent stroke weight to unify the set, making curved-heavy words take on a distinctive crystalline texture. The slashed zero and the angular treatment of C/G/O help differentiate similar shapes in contexts where clarity matters.