Sans Faceted Huluf 8 is a light, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, packaging, gaming, techno, angular, futuristic, industrial, geometric, geometric styling, sci-fi voice, display impact, constructed forms, faceted, chiseled, monoline, polygonal, crisp.
A monolinear, faceted sans built from straight segments that replace curves with sharp planar breaks. Strokes maintain a consistent thickness and end in clean, angled terminals, producing an overall polygonal silhouette across rounds like C, O, and S. Proportions are compact and regular, with simplified joins and corners that create a slightly hand-cut, constructed feel. The lowercase stays open and legible, while the numerals and capitals use the same straight-edged geometry for a cohesive set.
This font suits headlines, posters, titles, and logo wordmarks where a geometric, cut-facet personality is desirable. It can work well on packaging and branding systems that lean modern, industrial, or tech-oriented, and it pairs naturally with sci‑fi, gaming, and interface-themed graphics when used at medium-to-large sizes.
The overall tone feels technical and futuristic, like lettering cut from sheet material or plotted with a knife. Its crisp angles and lack of curvature give it a purposeful, engineered character with a subtle sci‑fi edge. The rhythm reads clean and modern, with just enough irregularity in the facets to feel distinctive rather than purely mechanical.
The design appears intended to translate a clean sans structure into an angular, faceted construction, turning typically curved glyphs into polygonal forms while preserving readability. It prioritizes a distinctive display voice through consistent straight-segment geometry and sharp terminals, aiming for a contemporary, engineered look.
Faceting is applied consistently, including in counters and bowls, so round forms appear as multi-sided shapes. Diagonals are prominent and slightly tense, lending energy to words at display sizes. The design’s sharp corners and open interiors suggest best performance when not set too small, where the segmented geometry can remain clear.