Sans Faceted Idket 3 is a very light, normal width, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, album art, game ui, event flyers, angular, quirky, handmade, techy, cryptic, display impact, futuristic tone, symbolic feel, experimental geometry, monoline, wireframe, faceted, geometric, spiky.
A sharply faceted, monoline display face built from straight strokes and angled joins, replacing curves with planar corners and polygonal counters. Strokes are consistently thin and even, with a slightly right-leaning, sketch-like rhythm that feels drawn rather than mechanically rigid. Uppercase forms are tall and narrow with frequent open terminals, while lowercase mixes simplified, angular constructions with occasional enclosed, diamond-like bowls. Numerals follow the same wireframe geometry, often using segmented outlines and pointed vertices, creating an airy, lightweight texture across text.
Best suited to short, attention-grabbing settings such as posters, headlines, titles, and branding moments that want a coded or sci‑fi edge. It can work well for game interfaces, album covers, and event flyers where atmosphere matters more than dense reading comfort, and where the faceted forms can be displayed at generous sizes.
The overall tone is cryptic and inventive, like improvised symbols or a futuristic rune set. Its sharp angles and spare construction give it a techy, puzzle-like personality, while the irregularities and varied letter builds keep it playful and handmade rather than cold.
The design intention appears to be an angular, faceted reinterpretation of a sans skeleton, prioritizing distinctive geometry and a symbol-like voice over neutral legibility. By using thin, straight segments and open constructions, it aims to create an airy, wiry texture with a futuristic, puzzle-oriented feel.
Many glyphs emphasize diagonals and acute angles, producing a distinctive zigzag flow on a line of text. Counters often appear as tilted polygons, and several letters rely on implied shapes and open apertures, which increases stylization and reduces conventional readability at smaller sizes.