Sans Faceted Ilha 14 is a light, very narrow, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, signage, titles, techno, futuristic, architectural, art deco, industrial, futurist styling, space efficiency, geometric consistency, display impact, angular, faceted, geometric, condensed, wireframe.
A condensed, monoline sans with sharply faceted terminals and polygonal “bends” that replace curves with short straight segments. Strokes stay even and clean, while corners frequently chamfer into clipped angles, producing an octagonal rhythm in bowls and joins. Counters tend toward narrow, elongated apertures, and many forms rely on vertical stems with minimal horizontal reach, yielding a tall, efficient silhouette. Overall spacing appears compact but legible, with consistent cap-to-ascender alignment and a restrained, schematic construction across letters and numerals.
Best suited for display typography such as headlines, posters, title treatments, and brand marks where its faceted geometry can be appreciated. It can also work for signage and interface accents that want a sleek, technical flavor, while extended small-size body text may feel tight due to the narrow construction and angular detail.
The font conveys a cool, engineered tone—equal parts retro-future and Art Deco signage—suggesting circuitry, mechanical drafting, and streamlined architecture. Its sharp facets and narrow proportions read as precise and technical rather than casual or humanist, giving text a distinctive, stylized voice.
The design appears intended to reinterpret a simple sans skeleton through a faceted, straight-segment approach, creating a clean but characterful alphabet that feels engineered and futuristic. Emphasis is placed on consistent monoline construction, sharp joins, and a compact vertical rhythm for striking, space-efficient display setting.
Distinctive chamfered terminals and segmented curves show up consistently in both uppercase and lowercase, including single-storey lowercase forms and streamlined numerals. The sample text highlights strong vertical emphasis and a regular, modular rhythm that becomes especially characteristic at display sizes where the faceting is most apparent.