Sans Faceted Orri 7 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height, monospaced font.
Keywords: ui labels, code samples, terminal text, schematics, signage, technical, industrial, retro, digital, utilitarian, grid precision, tech aesthetic, robust legibility, geometric uniformity, angular, chamfered, geometric, mechanical, octagonal.
This typeface is built from straight strokes with pronounced chamfered corners, replacing curves with crisp facets. Letterforms read as geometric and slightly octagonal in their rounding, with uniform stroke weight and clean terminals. Proportions are compact and consistent, and the overall rhythm is steady and grid-like, reinforced by the even spacing typical of a fixed-width design. Counters are relatively open for the style, and diagonals (as in V, W, X, and Y) are clean and symmetrical, maintaining a precise, engineered feel.
It works well where alignment and predictability matter, such as UI labels, terminal-style displays, code snippets, tables, and technical documentation. The strong geometry also suits functional signage, equipment markings, and graphic treatments that aim for a precise, engineered look.
The faceted construction gives the font a technical, industrial tone that feels at home in digital interfaces and hardware-adjacent aesthetics. Its sharp, clipped corners suggest precision and rugged functionality, with a subtle retro-computing flavor rather than softness or expressiveness.
The design appears intended to translate rounded shapes into a planar, machined vocabulary while preserving legibility in a tightly organized, grid-driven setting. It emphasizes consistency, robustness, and a distinctly technical voice suitable for system-like text and interface contexts.
Distinctive polygonal shaping appears throughout, including rounded letters rendered as multi-sided forms and numerals that echo the same chamfered geometry. The lowercase set keeps a straightforward, utilitarian structure, and the overall design prioritizes consistency and clarity over calligraphic nuance.