Sans Faceted Ilke 1 is a very light, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height, monospaced font.
Keywords: ui labels, code styling, tech branding, signage, posters, technical, futuristic, utilitarian, minimal, geometric system, display identity, digital aesthetic, industrial clarity, octagonal, chamfered, angular, geometric, wireframe.
A geometric, angular sans with chamfered corners that replace most curves with straight segments, producing an octagonal, faceted construction across rounds like O/C/G and numerals like 0/8/9. Strokes remain consistently thin and even, with squared terminals and occasional clipped joins that keep counters open and corners crisp. Proportions are steady and gridlike, with simple, schematic diagonals in V/W/X/Y and compact bowls on B/P/R that echo the same planar logic. In text, spacing and rhythm read orderly and mechanical, with a clear, uncluttered silhouette at larger sizes.
Best suited to interface labels, dashboards, and technical branding where a crisp, engineered voice is desirable. The thin strokes and faceted outlines can also work well for large-format graphics—posters, titles, and signage—especially in contexts that lean futuristic or retro-digital.
The overall tone feels technical and engineered, evoking instrument labels, interface readouts, and retro-computing or sci‑fi display aesthetics. Its faceted geometry gives it a cool, precise character—more schematic than expressive—while still remaining approachable due to its clean, consistent construction.
The font appears designed to translate a monoline skeleton into a faceted, polygonal system, prioritizing consistency of angles and a disciplined, modular rhythm. It aims to deliver a distinctive display flavor while retaining straightforward sans-letter clarity for short strings and headings.
The design relies on repeated corner angles and straight-line arcs, which makes rounded letters appear intentionally polygonal; this gives strong stylistic cohesion but also emphasizes the “constructed” nature of the forms. Distinctions like the angled tail on Q and the angular spur/leg behavior on R help maintain character differentiation within the uniform geometry.