Sans Faceted Gupi 2 is a very light, wide, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, tech ui, packaging, technical, futuristic, architectural, schematic, precise, sci-fi styling, geometric construction, technical voice, modern branding, display impact, angular, faceted, monoline, geometric, octagonal.
A monoline, slanted sans built from straight segments with clipped corners, replacing curves with crisp planar facets. Stroke weight stays consistently thin, while proportions run broad with generous horizontal spacing and an open, airy texture in text. Many bowls read as octagonal outlines (notably in O/C/G/0 and related lowercase), and diagonals are clean and taut, giving a drafted, constructed feel. The rhythm is slightly irregular in a deliberate way, with variable glyph widths and a mix of sharp joins and small chamfered terminals that keep counters open at small sizes.
Best suited for display roles where its faceted geometry can be appreciated—headlines, posters, logotypes, tech-themed interfaces, and packaging or titles with a modern/industrial brief. In longer passages it produces a light, spacious color that works well for short blocks, pull quotes, and captions where a sleek, schematic aesthetic is desired.
The faceted construction and forward slant give the face a technical, futuristic tone—like lettering from CAD drawings, sci‑fi interfaces, or architectural diagrams. Its thin lines and angular geometry feel precise and cool rather than expressive, projecting a modern, engineered personality.
The design appears intended to translate geometric, polygonal construction into a clean sans framework, emphasizing chamfered corners and straight-line curves to create a distinctive, engineered silhouette. The slant and open spacing reinforce a sense of motion and contemporary technology while keeping the overall structure legible and consistent.
Uppercase and lowercase share the same angular logic, helping the font maintain a consistent voice across mixed-case settings. Numerals follow the same chamfered, polygonal approach, reading especially clearly where round forms are typically expected, reinforcing the font’s distinctive “cut” geometry.