Sans Faceted Elve 10 is a bold, normal width, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Cybersport' by Anton Kokoshka, 'Midsole' by Grype, 'Karnchang' by Jipatype, 'Air Superfamily' by Positype, and 'Core Sans R' by S-Core (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: sports branding, headlines, posters, logotypes, packaging, sporty, industrial, aggressive, futuristic, tactical, impact, speed, ruggedness, machined look, display strength, angular, chamfered, faceted, blocky, slanted.
A heavy, slanted sans with sharply chamfered corners and planar facets that replace curves throughout. Strokes are broadly uniform with minimal contrast, producing dense, compact letterforms and a strong silhouette. Rounds like O/C/G are built from straight segments, and terminals often finish in clipped, wedge-like cuts. Proportions lean wide and sturdy in caps, while the lowercase keeps a straightforward, utilitarian structure with similarly faceted joins and tight internal counters.
Best suited to display typography such as sports identities, event graphics, bold headlines, and short taglines where impact matters more than fine detail. It also fits packaging and product graphics that want a rugged, engineered look, and can work for labels or UI accents when set large with adequate spacing.
The overall tone is forceful and energetic, with a mechanical, performance-driven feel. Its angular construction and forward slant read as fast, tough, and purpose-built, evoking sports branding, equipment markings, and tech-forward graphics.
The design appears intended to deliver a high-impact, forward-leaning voice using faceted geometry as a defining motif. By building traditionally curved forms from straight planes and chamfered corners, it aims for a sturdy, machined aesthetic that reads clearly and consistently in prominent, graphic applications.
The font’s faceting creates distinct corner highlights that stay consistent across letters and numerals, helping maintain a cohesive “cut-metal” rhythm in words. Because counters are relatively small and shapes are dense, it visually benefits from generous tracking and from use at display sizes where the angled cuts remain crisp.