Sans Faceted Huluf 6 is a light, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, packaging, game ui, geometric, angular, quirky, handmade, playful, faceted display, crafted geometry, stylized legibility, faceted, polygonal, chiseled, monoline, irregular.
A faceted, monoline sans with curves consistently replaced by short planar segments, producing polygonal bowls and octagonal counters. Strokes maintain an even weight while joints and terminals land in sharp, slightly irregular angles, giving the outlines a cut-from-paper or chiseled feel. Proportions are generally straightforward and upright, but widths and internal shapes vary noticeably across letters, creating a lively rhythm rather than strict modular consistency. Numerals follow the same angular construction, with segmented arcs and open, geometric forms that keep the set visually coherent.
Best suited to display sizes where the faceted construction can be appreciated—headlines, posters, and brand marks that want a geometric but handmade voice. It can also work for packaging, event graphics, and game or app UI accents where a stylized, angular sans is desirable, while extended body text may read busier due to the constant cornering.
The overall tone is geometric and playful, with a deliberately rough-cut, crafty character. Its angular facets add a subtle sci‑fi/tech edge, while the slight irregularity keeps it informal and human rather than sterile.
The design appears intended to reinterpret a plain sans skeleton through a consistent faceting rule, swapping smooth curves for straight segments to create a distinctive polygonal texture. It aims to balance straightforward legibility with an intentionally crafted, angular personality.
Round letters like O, C, and G become multi-sided shapes, and the segmented construction is especially prominent in bowls and diagonals, which can create a shimmering texture in paragraphs. The uniform stroke weight helps maintain clarity, but the frequent corners and varied widths make it feel more expressive than neutral in longer text.