Sans Faceted Nyby 10 is a bold, narrow, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Caligor' by Letterhend and 'Beachwood' by Swell Type (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, sports branding, apparel graphics, packaging, industrial, athletic, tactical, retro, mechanical, compact impact, rugged tone, display clarity, geometric consistency, condensed, angular, octagonal, stencil-like, monolinear.
A condensed, monolinear sans with sharply chamfered corners and faceted construction that replaces curves with short planar segments. Strokes are heavy and mostly uniform, with squared terminals and frequent octagonal shaping in bowls and counters (notably in O/0/8). The rhythm is tight and vertical, with compact apertures and straightforward, engineered joins; diagonals are clean and straight, while rounded letters read as clipped polygons. Figures are tall and blocky, and the overall spacing feels utilitarian rather than airy.
Best suited to headlines and short text where its condensed, faceted structure can read as a graphic feature—posters, sports branding, team or event collateral, and apparel/merch graphics. It also fits packaging and labels that benefit from a stamped, industrial look, and it can work for UI badges or category tags when set at sufficiently large sizes.
The faceted geometry conveys a rugged, mechanical tone with strong associations to athletic lettering, equipment markings, and industrial labeling. Its sharp corners and compressed stance feel assertive and functional, leaning toward a tactical or retro-tech mood rather than a friendly everyday voice.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum impact in a tight width while projecting a hard-edged, engineered personality. By standardizing chamfered corners and polygonal bowls, it aims for a consistent, high-energy display texture that stays legible in bold, all-caps settings and strong in mixed-case branding lines.
The face maintains a consistent chamfer angle across the set, creating a coherent ‘cut metal’ silhouette. Lowercase forms echo the same faceting, with simplified, compact counters and minimal curvature, helping mixed-case settings retain a uniform, signage-like texture.