Sans Faceted Lima 2 is a regular weight, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, branding, posters, logos, ui labels, tech, futuristic, industrial, digital, architectural, geometric system, sci-fi tone, technical clarity, display impact, octagonal, chamfered, angular, geometric, modular.
A geometric, faceted sans with monoline strokes and consistently chamfered corners that substitute for curves. Forms are built from straight segments and short 45° cuts, producing octagonal bowls in letters like O/C/G and similarly clipped terminals throughout. Proportions lean open and slightly wide in round characters, while diagonals in V/W/X/Y are crisp and symmetric, giving the text a clean, mechanical rhythm. Numerals follow the same construction with squared, cut-corner outlines and clear, schematic counters.
Best suited for headlines, titles, and short text where its angular construction is a feature—such as tech branding, product marks, posters, game/film graphics, and UI labeling. It can work in brief interface copy or captions when ample size and spacing preserve the sharp facets and open counters.
The overall tone is futuristic and technical, with a restrained, engineered feel reminiscent of display readouts, labeling, and sci‑fi interface typography. The repeated facets and straight-line geometry create a precise, no-nonsense voice that reads as modern and machine-made rather than humanist or calligraphic.
The font appears designed to translate a consistent chamfered, polygonal system into a full alphanumeric set, prioritizing a uniform mechanical texture and clear geometric silhouettes. Its intent is likely to provide a contemporary, sci‑fi-leaning display voice that stays clean and legible while avoiding curves and decorative flourishes.
The design maintains strong stylistic consistency across cases: lowercase echoes the same faceted construction and avoids soft joins, while punctuation and details appear simplified to match the straight-edged system. The clipped corners also help keep shapes distinct at display sizes by emphasizing corners, joints, and direction changes.