Sans Faceted Orry 6 is a regular weight, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, packaging, ui labels, tech, industrial, futuristic, architectural, tactical, angular system, tech tone, display clarity, industrial feel, faceted, angular, chamfered, geometric, monolinear.
A sharply faceted sans with chamfered corners and planar cuts that substitute for curves throughout. Strokes read largely monolinear, with crisp straight segments and angled joins creating an octagonal, machined geometry in rounds like O, C, and G. Proportions are compact and tidy with squared terminals; counters tend to be angular and slightly tightened, giving the texture a firm, engineered rhythm. Numerals follow the same cut-corner construction, and diagonals in letters like K, V, W, X, Y, and Z are clean and emphatic.
Best suited to display and short-to-medium text where the faceted construction can be appreciated—headlines, posters, logotypes, product branding, and packaging. It can also work for UI labels, dashboards, and interface components that benefit from a technical aesthetic and strong shape differentiation.
The overall tone feels technical and utilitarian, with a futuristic, equipment-label sensibility. Its chiseled forms suggest precision and robustness rather than softness or warmth, leaning toward a modern sci‑fi and industrial mood.
The design appears intended to translate a geometric sans into a faceted, cut-metal style, replacing roundness with controlled chamfers for a mechanical, contemporary voice. It prioritizes a consistent angular system across letters and numerals to deliver a distinctive, high-tech texture in both caps and mixed-case settings.
The consistent use of clipped corners creates a distinctive sparkle along baselines and cap lines, especially in text where repeated angled terminals build a patterned cadence. Lowercase maintains the same geometric discipline, keeping bowls and shoulders angular and minimizing curvature for a cohesive, system-like look.