Sans Faceted Hunaj 1 is a light, narrow, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui labels, tech branding, headlines, signage, posters, technical, futuristic, schematic, industrial, angular, futurist tone, technical clarity, geometric styling, systematized forms, faceted, chamfered, monoline, geometric, wireframe.
This typeface is built from monoline strokes with consistent weight and crisp, chamfered corners that replace most curves with short planar facets. Counters and bowls read as polygonal forms, and terminals are typically flat with small angled cuts, creating a clean, engineered rhythm. The proportions are compact with tall, narrow capitals and similarly streamlined lowercase, while spacing stays even and controlled for a tidy texture in lines of text. Overall geometry feels modular and constructed, with diagonal segments used sparingly to articulate joins and soften corner transitions without introducing true roundness.
It suits interface labels, control panels, wayfinding systems, and tech-oriented branding where a clean, engineered voice is desirable. The angular outlines and consistent stroke behavior also make it effective for titles, posters, and packaging accents that aim for a modern, synthetic aesthetic.
The tone is precise and machine-like, evoking technical labeling, sci‑fi interfaces, and architectural or electronic design language. Its faceted construction gives a cool, synthetic character—more schematic than friendly—while remaining legible in short phrases and headings.
The design appears intended to translate sans-serif letterforms into a faceted, polygonal construction, emphasizing precision and a manufactured feel. By minimizing curves and standardizing chamfered corners, it aims to deliver a coherent futuristic texture that remains readable while clearly signaling a technical personality.
The design’s visual identity comes from its repeated corner chamfers and polygonal bowls, which create a distinctive ‘cut metal’ silhouette across both uppercase and lowercase. Numerals follow the same angular logic, maintaining consistency for UI readouts and compact data labeling.