Sans Faceted Ilmy 3 is a regular weight, very narrow, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, packaging, sportswear, industrial, technical, condensed, sporty, futuristic, compact impact, engineered tone, speed emphasis, system consistency, faceted, angular, squared, tall, taut.
A tall, tightly condensed italic sans with crisp, faceted construction that replaces many curves with short planar segments. Strokes stay largely uniform, with squared terminals and subtly chamfered corners that create a cut-metal feel. The proportions are narrow and upright in structure but consistently slanted, producing a fast forward rhythm; round letters like O/C and numerals like 0/8 read as rounded rectangles with clipped corners. Counters are compact and the overall spacing feels economical, giving the line a taut, vertical texture.
Best suited to short, high-impact settings where a compact footprint and strong directional slant help build momentum—headlines, posters, logos/wordmarks, and packaging callouts. It also fits technical or performance-oriented UI moments (labels, panels, scoreboards) where condensed, angular forms reinforce a precise, engineered aesthetic.
The font projects speed and precision, combining a utilitarian industrial voice with a sporty, forward-leaning attitude. Its angular facets and condensed stance suggest machinery, instrumentation, and modern performance branding rather than warmth or informality.
The design appears intended to deliver a condensed italic voice with a distinctive faceted geometry, balancing straightforward sans legibility with a sharper, more engineered silhouette. Its consistent chamfering and squared terminals suggest a goal of creating a unified, system-like look that stays recognizable across letters and figures.
The faceting is applied consistently across capitals, lowercase, and figures, helping maintain a cohesive texture in longer text. Numerals follow the same squared, clipped-corner logic as the letters, supporting settings where text and numbers must look like a single system.