Sans Faceted Rahe 13 is a very bold, narrow, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'ATF Alternate Gothic' by ATF Collection, 'FF Good' by FontFont, 'CF Blast Gothic' by Fonts.GR, 'Molde' by Letritas, and 'Polin Sans' by Machalski (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, sports, branding, industrial, assertive, sporty, retro, tough, space saving, high impact, angular styling, industrial tone, condensed, blocky, faceted, angular, stencil-like.
A compact, heavy sans with condensed proportions and broad, low-contrast strokes. Curves are consistently translated into planar facets, producing clipped terminals and chamfered joins that read like cut metal rather than smooth geometry. Counters are tight and often squared-off, with short apertures and a strong vertical emphasis; round forms like O/C/G show flattened sides and angled transitions. Spacing appears built for impact, with sturdy stems and minimal delicacy, keeping letterforms bold and uniform across the set.
Best suited to display typography where density and presence matter: headlines, posters, storefront graphics, packaging, and brand marks that benefit from a forceful, compact word shape. It can also work for sports and event graphics, album/cover titles, and short callouts where the faceted styling becomes a distinctive visual hook.
The faceted construction gives the face a rugged, engineered tone—more hard-edged and utilitarian than friendly. Its compressed stance and sharp planes suggest speed, toughness, and a slightly retro, poster-driven energy that reads immediately in big, bold settings.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum visual impact in minimal horizontal space while adding character through angular, faceted modulation. By replacing smooth curves with crisp planes, it aims to feel manufactured and durable, lending a bold, industrial signature to display text.
Numerals and capitals carry the same chiseled logic as the lowercase, helping mixed-case text maintain a consistent, punchy texture. Diagonals (e.g., in V/W/X/Y) are steep and decisive, reinforcing the font’s mechanical rhythm and high-impact silhouette.