Sans Faceted Nire 1 is a very bold, narrow, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Behover' by Martype co (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, packaging, signage, industrial, authoritative, retro, no-nonsense, poster-ready, maximum impact, space saving, industrial voice, geometric styling, geometric, angular, chiseled, blocky, compressed.
A dense, heavy display sans with tall, compact proportions and a strongly vertical rhythm. Curves are consistently replaced by sharp planar facets and clipped corners, creating a chiseled, almost cut-from-metal feel. Strokes are thick and steady with minimal modulation, and counters are tight, often rectangular or slit-like, which boosts impact at large sizes. Joins and terminals tend to be squared or diagonally sheared, giving the alphabet a crisp, engineered texture and a distinctly compressed silhouette.
Best suited to bold headlines, posters, and short, high-impact statements where its compact width and faceted construction can carry visual weight. It can work well for branding and packaging that wants an industrial or engineered flavor, and for signage where a strong, condensed silhouette is helpful.
The overall tone is forceful and utilitarian, projecting confidence and immediacy. Its faceted geometry adds a retro-industrial edge that can feel mechanical, rugged, and slightly militaristic without becoming decorative. The tight counters and hard corners make the voice feel assertive and attention-grabbing.
The design appears intended as a hard-edged, high-impact display sans that replaces traditional curves with faceted planes to create a distinctive, manufactured look. Its compact proportions and tight counters suggest an emphasis on maximizing punch and presence in limited horizontal space.
The face rewards larger settings where the internal shapes and faceting read clearly; at smaller sizes the narrow apertures and compact counters may darken quickly. Uppercase forms look especially poster-oriented, while the lowercase keeps the same angular logic for a cohesive, single-voice system.