Sans Faceted Heho 9 is a regular weight, narrow, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Eurostile Next' and 'Eurostile Next Paneuropean' by Linotype and 'Kairos Sans' by Monotype (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, packaging, signage, sports branding, technical, industrial, architectural, sporty, retro-futurist, geometric branding, space-saving, system labeling, display impact, angular, faceted, condensed, monoline, octagonal.
A condensed, monoline sans with sharply faceted construction: curves are consistently replaced by short straight segments that produce octagonal counters and clipped terminals. Strokes stay even and low in contrast, with squared joins and a clean, engineered rhythm. The uppercase set is tall and narrow with compact bowls and tight apertures, while the lowercase follows the same straight-sided logic with simplified, geometric forms (notably in round letters and the double-storey-like shapes). Numerals echo the same beveled, cut-corner feel, keeping a uniform, mechanical texture in running text.
Works best for headlines, posters, and branding where its faceted geometry can be appreciated, and for signage or labels that benefit from compact width and strong, regular strokes. It can also suit sports or tech-adjacent identities, packaging, and UI accents when a crisp, engineered voice is desired.
The overall tone feels technical and industrial, with a retro-futurist edge created by its chamfered geometry. It reads as precise and utilitarian, like lettering designed for systems, labeling, or equipment, but with enough distinctive character to signal “designed” rather than purely neutral.
Likely drawn to translate a modern sans skeleton into a cut-corner, faceted aesthetic, delivering a compact, high-impact texture that remains orderly in lines of text. The design appears intended to evoke precision and constructed geometry while staying straightforward and readable.
The font’s identity is driven by consistent chamfers and planar facets, which keep counters crisp and recognizable at display sizes. In text settings it maintains a steady vertical cadence and a slightly “stenciled-by-geometry” impression without actual breaks, making it well suited to bold, structured typography.