Sans Faceted Typo 7 is a bold, very narrow, low contrast, upright, tall x-height font visually similar to 'Ando' by JCFonts, 'Aureola' by OneSevenPointFive, and 'Monbloc' by Rui Nogueira (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, branding, apparel, industrial, gothic, authoritative, futuristic, sporty, impact, compactness, modern edge, machine aesthetic, faceted, angular, condensed, monolinear, vertical.
A condensed, monolinear sans built from sharp planar facets rather than smooth curves. Strokes terminate in clipped, chamfered corners, giving bowls and diagonals an octagonal, machined feel. The vertical rhythm is strong and consistent, with narrow counters, tight apertures, and a largely straight-sided construction that keeps silhouettes rigid and compact. Numerals and capitals echo the same chiseled geometry, while the lowercase retains a tall, compressed profile that maintains the font’s dense, vertical texture in text.
Best suited to headlines, posters, wordmarks, and identity systems that need a compact, high-impact voice. It also fits sports branding, industrial or tech-forward graphics, packaging titles, and apparel marks where the rigid, faceted silhouettes can carry from print to signage and large-format use.
The overall tone is forceful and engineered, reading as industrial and slightly gothic due to its chiseled terminals and dark, tightly packed shapes. It suggests control, toughness, and a modernized blackletter-adjacent attitude without decorative flourishes, making it feel both utilitarian and stylized.
The design appears intended to merge a clean sans structure with a cut-metal, beveled aesthetic, trading curves for facets to create a distinctive, engineered texture. Its condensed proportions and consistent angularity point to display-led branding use where presence and recognizability are prioritized.
Because the design relies on narrow counters and angular joins, it tends to create strong word-shapes and high impact at display sizes, while smaller sizes may feel dense. The consistent faceting across rounds (like C/O) and joins (like M/W/V) gives the face a cohesive, constructed look.