Sans Faceted Omfu 8 is a regular weight, narrow, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, packaging, ui display, futuristic, technical, angular, industrial, retro, geometric styling, sci-fi tone, systematic construction, display impact, chamfered, geometric, crisp, hard-edged, faceted.
A sharp, faceted sans with chamfered corners and planar cuts that replace curves with angled segments. Strokes are consistently even, producing a clean monoline texture, while counters and bowls are rendered as polygonal shapes (notably in O/0 and rounded letters). Proportions run compact and slightly condensed, with open apertures and squared terminals that create a crisp, rhythmic pattern in text. The numerals and capitals emphasize strong geometry and straight-sided forms, reinforcing a constructed, machined feel.
Well suited for display applications where a geometric, angular voice is desired—headlines, posters, identity marks, and packaging titles. It can also work for short UI labels or interface-like graphics where crisp faceted forms support a technical aesthetic, though it’s best used at sizes that preserve the corner detailing.
The overall tone is futuristic and technical, with a subtle retro-digital flavor. Its hard angles and octagonal rounds suggest engineered surfaces—more sci‑fi interface than handwritten warmth—while staying readable and disciplined in running text.
The design appears intended to translate a clean sans structure into a faceted, polygonal language, delivering a modern engineered look while keeping letterforms straightforward and legible. Its consistent chamfers and angular rounds suggest an aim toward sci‑fi/industrial branding and display typography that feels precise and constructed.
Diagonal joins and clipped corners give many letters a directional, “cut-metal” presence, and the design maintains a consistent facet logic across uppercase, lowercase, and figures. The texture is assertive without heavy stroke contrast, making the style read more like a designed system than a calligraphic model.