Sans Faceted Omdy 2 is a light, narrow, monoline, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, packaging, tech branding, angular, technical, futuristic, hand-cut, edgy, stylization, modernization, geometry, texture, faceted, geometric, chiseled, linear, crisp.
A faceted sans built from straight segments that substitute for curves, producing polygonal bowls and sharply kinked joins. Strokes are consistently thin with minimal contrast, and terminals are cut on angles rather than squared off, giving letters a chiseled, constructed feel. Proportions read generally compact and vertical, with simple, open counters where applicable and a restrained, utilitarian punctuation style in the sample text. The overall rhythm is slightly irregular in a deliberate way, like geometry drafted by hand rather than perfectly machined.
Best suited to headlines, posters, titles, and brand marks where the angular construction can be a feature. It also works well for short UI labels, packaging callouts, and tech-leaning graphics when used at sizes that preserve the crisp corner detail.
The sharp planar forms and clipped corners create a sci‑fi and industrial tone, with a hint of DIY signage or cut-metal lettering. It feels assertive and modern, leaning toward experimental and techy rather than friendly or calligraphic.
The design intent appears to be translating a clean sans skeleton into a straight-edged, faceted vocabulary—evoking cut, folded, or plotted forms while keeping a lightweight, economical stroke. It aims to deliver a distinctive geometric texture without sacrificing basic legibility in short text.
In text, the repeated angled corners and segmented curves become the defining texture, especially in rounded letters and numerals, where the polygonal construction is most apparent. The design stays readable while foregrounding its faceted geometry, making it more of a display voice than an invisible text workhorse.