Sans Faceted Ihki 10 is a very light, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui labels, tech branding, headlines, posters, wayfinding, futuristic, technical, geometric, digital, sci-fi, futurism, precision, systemization, tech aesthetic, geometric reduction, angular, faceted, octagonal, modular, linear.
This typeface is built from straight, monoline strokes that replace curves with crisp chamfered corners, producing an overall octagonal, faceted construction. Terminals are flat and clean, with consistent stroke thickness and a restrained, open counter design that keeps forms airy despite the hard geometry. Proportions are compact and efficient, with squared-off bowls and diagonals that feel engineered rather than calligraphic; the result is a crisp, schematic rhythm in both caps and lowercase. Numerals and round letters (O, C, G, 0) read as polygonal rings, reinforcing the planar, cut-corner system across the set.
It performs best in display and short-to-medium text where its faceted geometry can be appreciated—such as tech branding, product titling, interface headings, and schematic or wayfinding-style graphics. The light stroke and angular detail also suit posters and motion graphics where a crisp, futuristic voice is desired.
The overall tone is precise and forward-looking, evoking interfaces, instrumentation, and industrial labeling. Its sharp geometry and light, skeletal presence give it a cool, synthetic character that feels at home in sci‑fi and tech contexts.
The font appears designed to translate rounded sans forms into a planar, machined system, emphasizing corner cuts and straight segments for a contemporary, engineered aesthetic. The consistent faceting suggests an intention to feel digital and architectural while remaining legible in typical headline and UI-sized settings.
The design maintains strong stylistic consistency across cases, with lowercase keeping the same faceted logic rather than introducing more humanist curves. Spacing appears even in the sample text, and the simplified, angular apertures prioritize a clean, constructed look over softness or warmth.