Sans Faceted Ande 5 is a very bold, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Cybersport' by Anton Kokoshka, 'Bio Sans' and 'Bio Sans Soft' by Dharma Type, and 'Panton Rust' by Fontfabric (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, sports branding, team apparel, packaging, sporty, industrial, tough, retro, impact, ruggedness, machined look, athletic tone, angular, chamfered, blocky, octagonal, geometric.
A heavy, block-constructed sans with crisp chamfered corners that turn curves into short planar facets. Strokes stay consistently thick, producing strong, dark silhouettes and compact counters; round letters like O/C/G/Q read as octagonal forms with clipped terminals. Proportions are sturdy and slightly condensed in feel, with squared shoulders and blunt ends that keep spacing tight and rhythm emphatic across lines.
Best suited to large sizes where the clipped corners and compact counters can read clearly—titles, posters, sports branding, merchandise, and bold packaging. It can also work for short labels or UI badges where a rugged, engineered voice is desired, but its dense shapes are less ideal for long-form text.
The faceted geometry and dense color convey a tough, utilitarian attitude with a clear sports-stencil and equipment-label energy. It feels assertive and mechanical rather than friendly, lending a retro athletic and industrial tone to headlines and logos.
Designed to translate a simple sans skeleton into a faceted, machined aesthetic, prioritizing impact, uniform heft, and a distinctive corner-cut motif. The goal appears to be a high-contrast, high-authority display voice that stays consistent across letters and numerals.
Uppercase forms are especially uniform and sign-like, while the lowercase retains the same chiseled construction, keeping mixed-case settings cohesive. Numerals match the octagonal logic, maintaining consistent corner cuts and a strong, scoreboard-like presence.