Sans Faceted Ippo 7 is a bold, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Charles Wright' by K-Type (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, packaging, signage, techy, industrial, retro, futuristic, rugged, impact, tech feel, modular geometry, display clarity, branding, rounded corners, square forms, incised joins, soft terminals, geometric.
A chunky geometric sans with squared bowls and broad, rounded corners, blending straight runs with clipped, faceted transitions where you’d expect continuous curves. Strokes are heavy and even, with open counters and generous interior space that keeps the dense weight readable. Many letters show subtly notched or chamfer-like joints and flattened arcs, producing a mechanical rhythm across the alphabet. Numerals follow the same boxy construction, with clear, simplified forms and consistent corner rounding.
Best suited to display applications where its geometric, faceted shapes can read at a glance—headlines, posters, logos, product marks, packaging, and signage. It also fits UI or interface-style graphics and themed branding that calls for a technical, constructed voice. For long-form text, it’s likely most comfortable at larger sizes where the angular details and square counters remain clear.
The overall tone feels technical and engineered—confident, utilitarian, and slightly retro-futuristic. Its faceted curvature and sturdy mass suggest equipment labeling, sci‑fi interfaces, or sports/vehicle graphics rather than delicate editorial typography. The rounded corners soften the hardness enough to feel approachable while still reading as purposeful and robust.
The font appears designed to deliver a constructed, modern-industrial look by replacing round curves with planar facets and squared geometry, while keeping readability through open counters and softened corners. It aims to evoke a manufactured, tech-forward aesthetic with strong visual impact and consistent modular forms.
The design maintains a consistent square-module logic across uppercase, lowercase, and figures, with distinct silhouettes that prioritize quick recognition. Spacing in the sample text appears balanced for display sizes, and the uniform stroke weight gives lines a solid, billboard-like presence.