Sans Faceted Itby 3 is a very light, wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logotypes, ui labels, posters, sci‑fi titles, futuristic, techy, geometric, instrumental, geometric system, tech aesthetic, display impact, mechanical tone, angular, octagonal, chiseled, modular, wireframe.
This font is built from thin, even strokes and replaces curves with short straight facets, producing an octagonal, chamfered look throughout. Letterforms lean on squared counters and clipped corners, with rounded shapes (O, C, S) rendered as multi-segment polygons. Horizontal and vertical strokes stay consistent in weight, while joins are clean and mechanical, and terminals typically end flat with occasional diagonal cuts. Proportions read open and airy, with generous internal space and a slightly extended footprint that emphasizes the faceted geometry in both capitals and lowercase.
Best suited for short-to-medium display settings where the faceted construction can be appreciated: headlines, branding marks, packaging titles, and interface labels in tech or industrial themes. It can also work for posters or captions when a crisp, engineered voice is desired, especially at sizes large enough for the thin strokes and corner cuts to remain clear.
The overall tone feels technical and schematic, like lettering cut from rigid material or plotted from vectors. The faceting lends a sci‑fi and industrial character, suggesting engineered precision rather than warmth or handwriting. It conveys a controlled, modern mood suited to digital interfaces and hardware-adjacent branding.
The design appears intended to translate a geometric, chamfered construction into a readable sans alphabet, prioritizing consistency of facets and stroke economy over organic curves. It aims to evoke machined precision and a forward-looking, digital tone while remaining legible across mixed-case text and numerals.
Distinctive details include polygonal bowls in O/0 and a segmented, angular S, plus a faceted G and Q that reinforce the constructed aesthetic. The lowercase retains the same architectural logic as the caps, keeping the design coherent in continuous text. Numerals follow the same clipped-corner system, reading like display digits without becoming fully seven-segment.