Sans Faceted Huruh 4 is a very light, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: sci‑fi ui, tech branding, signage, posters, headlines, futuristic, technical, geometric, minimal, futuristic aesthetic, geometric consistency, technical voice, systematic construction, angular, faceted, octagonal, wireframe, sharp-cornered.
A faceted, geometric sans built from a uniform, hairline stroke with crisp joins and clipped corners. Curves are consistently replaced by short straight segments, producing an octagonal, chamfered outline throughout. Proportions are clean and open with generous interior counters, a modest contrast-free texture, and a slightly mechanical rhythm driven by straight verticals and horizontal terminals. Numerals and capitals follow the same planar construction, keeping the set visually cohesive in both isolated glyphs and continuous text.
Well suited to sci‑fi themed interfaces, product UI mockups, and technical or industrial branding where a precise, geometric voice is desired. It can also work for headlines, posters, and signage that benefit from a distinctive faceted silhouette, with best results at medium to large sizes where the chamfered details stay crisp.
The overall tone feels futuristic and engineered, like labeling on instruments, spacecraft, or digital hardware. Its sharp planar geometry reads precise and schematic rather than soft or humanist, giving text a cool, modern edge.
The design appears intended to translate a clean sans skeleton into a faceted, polygonal construction, trading curves for planar cuts to evoke engineered precision. The consistent monoline stroke and restrained detailing suggest a focus on clarity and a recognizable futuristic signature rather than calligraphic nuance.
The consistent corner-chamfer logic creates a recognizable ‘cut’ signature in letters that would normally rely on curves, which keeps word shapes distinctive while maintaining a clean, minimal surface. The light stroke and open forms help prevent the angular detailing from becoming overly dense in running text, especially at display sizes.