Sans Faceted Ukhe 6 is a bold, wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Phatthana' by Jipatype (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, logotypes, packaging, signage, industrial, techno, sporty, futuristic, utility, impact, modernize, ruggedize, systematize, branding, chamfered, angular, blocky, compact, sturdy.
A heavy, geometric sans with faceted construction: curves are largely replaced by straight segments and clipped corners. Strokes are monolinear with squared terminals and consistent joins, producing a rigid, engineered rhythm. Counters tend toward squarish and octagonal shapes (notably in O/0 and D), while diagonals are sharp and clean, giving letters like A, K, V, W, and X a crisp mechanical snap. The lowercase is sturdy and compact, with simple bowls and minimal modulation; numerals follow the same chamfered logic and read as robust, sign-like forms.
Best suited to high-impact display use such as headlines, posters, branding wordmarks, and packaging where its faceted geometry can set a strong tone. It also fits wayfinding, labels, and UI-style titling for games or tech products, where rugged, angular letterforms reinforce an engineered feel. In longer text blocks it stays readable, but its assertive shapes will dominate the page, so it works most naturally for short, punchy copy.
The overall tone feels utilitarian and machine-made, with a tech-forward, industrial edge. Its faceted geometry suggests hardware, equipment labeling, and modern sport or sci‑fi interfaces rather than soft or literary settings. The bold presence and clipped corners convey decisiveness and toughness.
The font appears designed to translate the feel of chamfered metal and machined parts into a clean sans structure, delivering a bold, contemporary voice while keeping glyph construction systematic and consistent. The emphasis is on strong silhouettes, crisp angles, and a uniform stroke system that reads quickly at display sizes.
The design maintains a consistent chamfer language across rounds, corners, and terminals, which helps headings feel cohesive. The punctuation shown (period, colon, apostrophe, ampersand) matches the same squared, no-nonsense styling, keeping texture uniform in paragraph samples.