Sans Faceted Ilbe 4 is a very light, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui labeling, tech branding, posters, headlines, sci-fi titles, digital, technical, futuristic, schematic, retro-tech, digital display, modular system, tech aesthetic, geometric clarity, segmented, angular, octagonal, modular, open corners.
A modular, segmented sans with straight strokes and clipped, faceted corners that replace most curves with angled joins. Strokes are consistently thin and evenly weighted, with frequent small gaps at corners and terminals that create an “assembled” outline rather than continuous contours. Proportions are fairly tall with generous sidebearings, and the rhythm feels measured and grid-aware; diagonals appear where needed (e.g., in V, W, X, Y), but remain crisp and mechanical. Numerals follow the same segmented logic, producing a cohesive alphanumeric system.
Well-suited for interface labeling, dashboards, product markings, and tech-forward branding where a segmented, engineered aesthetic is desired. It also works effectively for posters, titles, and motion graphics that lean into a digital or sci‑fi mood, especially at medium to large sizes where the corner gaps read cleanly.
The overall tone is electronic and instrument-like, evoking LED/LCD readouts, control panels, and engineered labeling. Its crisp segmentation and open joints give it a cool, precise character that reads as modern and slightly retro-futurist at the same time.
The design appears intended to translate seven-segment/digital-display logic into a fuller alphabet while preserving a strict modular construction and faceted geometry. The open corners and uniform stroke treatment suggest a focus on creating a distinctive, hardware-like texture that stays consistent across uppercase, lowercase, and numerals.
The deliberate corner breaks and modular construction add texture at larger sizes but introduce a dotted/fragmented feel in longer text. The lowercase is simplified and geometric, maintaining the same angular language as the capitals, which keeps the family consistent but makes the texture more display-oriented than bookish.