Sans Faceted Lyde 9 is a regular weight, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height, monospaced font.
Keywords: ui labels, code snippets, dashboards, posters, packaging, tech, industrial, retro, arcade, mechanical, geometric system, tech branding, retro digital, signage clarity, modular display, angular, octagonal, chamfered, modular, geometric.
A faceted, geometric sans with consistently chamfered corners that turn curves into short straight segments, producing an octagonal, planed look across bowls and rounds. Strokes appear even and squared-off at terminals, with a compact, grid-driven construction that keeps counters and apertures crisp and controlled. Uppercase forms are clean and schematic, while lowercase maintains the same angular logic, with single-storey shapes and boxy joins that emphasize a constructed, modular rhythm. Numerals follow the same cut-corner geometry, with clearly framed 0 and angular 8/9 forms that read as engineered rather than handwritten.
This style works well for interface labeling, dashboards, diagrams, and settings where a technical, engineered voice is desired. It can also be effective in posters, album art, and packaging that aims for a retro-tech or industrial feel, particularly at medium to large sizes where the faceting becomes a defining detail.
The overall tone feels technical and machine-made, evoking signage, device labeling, and early-digital or arcade-era display aesthetics. Its sharp facets add a slightly futuristic edge while retaining a functional, utilitarian steadiness.
The design appears intended to translate familiar sans forms into a planar, cut-corner system that reads like vector geometry or machined parts. By replacing curves with consistent facets and maintaining a strict construction, it aims to deliver a distinctive techno-industrial character while preserving straightforward legibility.
The uniform corner chamfers create a distinctive texture in text: repeated angled cuts form a subtle zig-zag sparkle along curves and diagonals. The design stays disciplined across cases and figures, favoring clarity and consistency over organic warmth.