Sans Faceted Ilze 3 is a regular weight, very narrow, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Gemsbuck Pro' by Studio Fat Cat and 'Dealerplate' by Typodermic (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: signage, posters, packaging, interfaces, branding, industrial, technical, retro, architectural, utilitarian, space saving, technical clarity, industrial styling, geometric uniformity, condensed, monoline, angular, faceted, chamfered.
A condensed, monoline sans with an angular, faceted construction that replaces curves with straight segments and small chamfered corners. Strokes maintain an even thickness throughout, creating a crisp, engineered rhythm, while counters are tall and narrow with squared-off terminals. The uppercase set reads rigid and vertical, and the lowercase follows with compact bowls and straight-sided forms, producing a consistent, modular texture in text. Numerals echo the same squared geometry, with clear, open shapes and minimal detailing.
Well suited to space-constrained settings such as signage, wayfinding, labels, and UI panels where a compact, technical look is desired. It can also work effectively in posters, packaging, and brand systems that aim for an industrial or retro-futurist tone, particularly in headlines, callouts, and short blocks of text.
The overall tone is functional and machine-like, with a retro-industrial flavor reminiscent of labeling, drafting, and utilitarian signage. Its faceted corners add a hard-edged precision that feels technical rather than friendly, giving lines of text a disciplined, structured presence.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum economy of width while maintaining legibility through simplified, geometric forms. Its faceted construction suggests a deliberate reference to manufactured surfaces and engineered graphics, prioritizing a clean, standardized look over calligraphic warmth.
Because of its tight proportions and straight-sided shapes, the typeface produces strong vertical emphasis and a dense typographic color; it is most comfortable at sizes where the small chamfers and narrow counters remain distinguishable. The distinctive, polygonal treatment of rounded letters (like C, O, S) is a defining feature and drives much of its character.