Sans Faceted Idlur 1 is a very light, wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height, monospaced font.
Keywords: ui labels, technical diagrams, code samples, sci-fi titles, data displays, technical, futuristic, schematic, retro-digital, minimal, geometric construction, systematic clarity, technical tone, display utility, angular, faceted, octagonal, geometric, wireframe.
A thin, single-stroke sans built from straight segments and clipped corners, replacing curves with crisp planar facets. Bowls and rounds resolve into octagonal forms, while terminals are clean and unadorned, giving a precise, plotted look. The overall proportions feel spacious and horizontally generous, with consistent stroke weight and a steady, cell-like rhythm that reads evenly across letters and numerals.
Works well for interface labels, schematic annotations, technical diagrams, and data-oriented graphics where a precise, measured rhythm is helpful. It also suits sci‑fi or tech branding moments—titles, posters, and motion graphics—where the faceted construction can be a defining visual motif.
The faceted geometry and hairline strokes create a cool, technical tone reminiscent of vector drafting, early CAD lettering, and digital displays. Its sharp cornering and restrained construction feel modernist and system-oriented, with a subtle retro-computing flavor in longer text.
Likely designed to translate geometric, straight-line construction into a readable sans, emphasizing modular consistency and crisp cornering over organic curvature. The intent appears to be a clean, engineered voice that feels at home in digital and technical contexts while remaining legible in short passages.
Numerals and capitals emphasize the octagonal construction (notably 0/O-like forms), and the punctuation echoes the same spare, engineered approach. In paragraph settings the uniform rhythm is strong, but the very light strokes and angular counters can make dense copy feel airy and slightly brittle, favoring clear spacing and moderate sizes.