Sans Faceted Huris 8 is a very light, wide, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, packaging, book covers, branding, handmade, quirky, geometric, playful, sketchy, humanized geometry, display texture, playful tone, distinctive voice, angular, faceted, monoline, open apertures, irregular.
A monoline, faceted sans with polygonal construction that replaces smooth curves with short straight segments. Strokes remain consistently thin, with slight wobble and uneven joins that create a hand-drawn rhythm. Proportions are generally roomy with open counters and simplified terminals; round letters (O, C, G, Q, 0, 8, 9) read as multi-sided shapes rather than true ovals. Overall spacing feels airy, and the figures follow the same angular logic as the letters for a cohesive set.
Best suited to headlines, short paragraphs, and display settings where its angular texture can be appreciated. It works well for playful branding, packaging, editorial callouts, and poster design, and can add a handmade-geometric flavor to logos or titles.
The font conveys a casual, inventive tone—like quick marker lettering translated into crisp planar facets. Its irregularities feel intentional and friendly, giving it a quirky, human presence while still reading as geometric and constructed.
The design appears intended to blend a constructed geometric skeleton with an intentionally imperfect, hand-rendered finish. By faceting curves into straight planes and keeping strokes very light, it aims to feel modern and graphical while remaining approachable and informal.
In text, the faceting becomes a repeating texture, with corners and flat segments creating a lightly jittered pattern across lines. Some glyphs show asymmetry and varied corner angles, which adds character but makes the face feel more display-oriented than strictly utilitarian at small sizes.