Sans Faceted Iddew 9 is a very light, normal width, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, titles, tech ui, technical, angular, futuristic, schematic, experimental, geometric concept, futuristic display, constructed forms, stylistic texture, monoline, faceted, polygonal, geometric, spiky.
A monoline, faceted sans drawn from straight segments that substitute for curves, producing polygonal bowls and chamfer-like corners throughout. Strokes stay consistently thin and crisp, with a slightly forward-leaning construction and open, airy counters that keep the texture light on the page. The lowercase shows a simple, linear skeleton with occasional angular joins and compact terminals, while round forms like O/C/G read as multi-sided shapes rather than true curves. Spacing appears moderately open, and the overall rhythm is irregular in a deliberate, hand-plotted way that emphasizes the segmented geometry.
Best suited to display roles where its faceted construction can be appreciated—headlines, posters, title treatments, and branding in technology, gaming, or futuristic themes. It can work for short UI labels or captions when ample size and spacing are available, but its ultra-thin strokes and angular detailing favor larger settings over dense text.
The letterforms evoke a technical, constructed mood—like plotting lines on a grid, etched markings, or low‑poly geometry. Its sharp facets and sparse strokes feel modern and slightly sci‑fi, with an experimental edge rather than a neutral, everyday tone.
The design appears intended to translate a geometric, straight-edge drawing approach into a legible sans, prioritizing a cohesive faceted motif over conventional curves. It aims to deliver a distinctive, constructed voice that feels engineered and contemporary while remaining readable in short to medium lines.
Several glyphs lean into geometric simplification (notably bowls and diagonals), which creates distinctive silhouettes but also a purposefully “drawn-from-segments” consistency across the set. Numerals follow the same polygonal logic, keeping the overall voice cohesive in both display text and short passages.