Sans Faceted Tyha 1 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui titles, tech branding, sci-fi posters, signage, packaging, futuristic, tech, industrial, retro, geometric, geometric system, sci-fi tone, technical clarity, display impact, faceted, chamfered, octagonal, modular, monolinear.
A geometric sans built from straight strokes and crisp chamfered corners, replacing curves with short planar facets. Strokes maintain an even, monolinear feel with squared terminals and consistent join behavior, creating an octagonal rhythm in bowls and rounded forms (e.g., O, C, G, 0). Proportions are clean and fairly open, with generous internal counters and clear separation in forms like a, e, and g. The overall texture is orderly and engineered, with a mix of rounded-turned-angular shapes and simpler vertical/horizontal constructions that keep wordforms legible at display sizes.
Well-suited to technology branding, interface headings, game/UI titles, and sci‑fi or industrial poster work where crisp geometry reads as intentional. It can also work for labels, packaging, and directional signage that benefits from high shape consistency and clear, engineered forms. For longer reading, it performs best in short paragraphs, pull quotes, or larger sizes where the faceting can be appreciated without adding visual noise.
The faceted geometry and hard corners convey a technical, machine-made tone that reads as futuristic and industrial. At the same time, the chamfered shapes suggest a retro-digital sensibility, reminiscent of sci‑fi interfaces and late-20th-century techno aesthetics. The steady stroke rhythm keeps the voice controlled and utilitarian rather than expressive.
The font appears designed to translate a neutral sans skeleton into a distinctive faceted system, using chamfers to unify every curve-like area into planar geometry. The aim seems to be a contemporary display voice that feels engineered and modern while staying structurally familiar and readable. Consistent stroke treatment and repeated corner logic suggest a deliberate, modular construction for cohesive branding.
The design leans on repeated octagonal motifs across letters and numerals, giving a cohesive system-like consistency. Angular rounding is handled through small bevels rather than true curves, producing a distinctive sparkle in headlines and signage. The mix of compact joins and open counters helps maintain clarity in continuous text, though the strong corner language remains the dominant visual signature.