Sans Faceted Ihpy 11 is a very light, very wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: branding, headlines, ui labels, posters, tech packaging, futuristic, technical, minimal, architectural, precise, futurism, system design, geometric clarity, technical tone, monoline, angular, faceted, chamfered, geometric.
A monoline, geometric sans with chamfered corners that replace most curves with short straight facets. Strokes are consistently thin and even, with a squared, octagonal construction visible in rounds like O/C/G and in the numerals. Proportions read broad and open, with generous internal space and a clean, linear rhythm; diagonals and V/W forms are sharp and airy, while many lowercase shapes adopt simplified, single-story constructions with clipped terminals. Overall spacing feels measured and technical, and the design maintains a tight, system-like consistency across caps, lowercase, and figures.
Well suited to display roles such as tech-oriented branding, product names, posters, and motion/interaction design where a precise, futuristic voice is desired. It can also work for UI labels, diagrams, and short annotations when clarity and a schematic aesthetic are more important than long-form reading comfort.
The faceted geometry and hairline strokes give a futuristic, engineered tone—more instrument-panel than editorial. It feels cool, orderly, and slightly sci‑fi, with an architectural precision that suggests drafting, interfaces, and schematic labeling.
The design appears intended to translate a geometric, multi-sided construction into a lightweight sans that feels modern and engineered. By standardizing chamfered corners and keeping stroke weight uniform, it aims for a crisp, systematized look that evokes technical drawing and digital hardware aesthetics.
The chamfer motif is applied broadly, creating an octagonal impression in bowls and counters; this keeps the texture crisp even where letters would normally be rounded. Because the strokes are extremely fine, the face reads cleanest when not forced into small sizes or visually noisy backgrounds.