Sans Faceted Lity 9 is a regular weight, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, packaging, signage, techno, industrial, futuristic, architectural, utilitarian, geometric system, tech branding, sci-fi tone, mechanical clarity, chamfered, octagonal, angular, geometric, modular.
A geometric sans built from straight strokes and sharply chamfered corners, replacing curves with crisp facets. Bowls and rounds resolve into octagonal silhouettes, with consistent monoline stroke weight and a firm, squared-off construction. Counters are open and fairly generous for the style, while terminals end in flat cuts or angled clips that maintain a tight, mechanical rhythm. Spacing reads even and controlled, and the overall texture is clean and high-contrast in silhouette despite the absence of true curves.
Best suited to display sizes where the faceted outlines and clipped corners can read clearly—titles, posters, logos, packaging, and wayfinding with a technical theme. It can also work for UI accents or labeling in contexts that benefit from a crisp, engineered aesthetic, while long passages of small text may feel visually busy due to the strong angularity.
The faceted geometry conveys a technical, engineered tone—more hard-surface and synthetic than friendly or organic. It feels contemporary and slightly sci‑fi, with an industrial clarity that suggests machinery, digital interfaces, and constructed environments.
The font appears designed to translate a modern sans skeleton into a planar, chamfered system, prioritizing a cohesive sci‑tech silhouette and repeatable geometric construction. Its consistent facets and monoline strokes suggest an intention to feel precise, manufactured, and contemporary across both uppercase and lowercase.
The design leans on repeated chamfer motifs across letters and numerals, giving the set a cohesive, modular look. Diagonals (notably in V, W, X, Y, and 4/7) are handled with the same clipped-corner logic, reinforcing a consistent, fabricated feel rather than a calligraphic one.