Sans Faceted Gure 5 is a very light, wide, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: display, posters, titles, branding, headlines, techy, schematic, angular, futuristic, experimental, sci-fi feel, constructed look, geometric reduction, outline display, technical tone, monoline, faceted, octagonal, wireframe, geometric.
A monoline, outline-driven design built from straight segments and clipped corners, producing faceted, almost octagonal curves throughout. Strokes are very thin with crisp joins and occasional doubled/parallel lines on verticals that read like a constructed or traced contour. The italic slant is consistent, and letterforms stay open and airy, with simplified terminals and a slightly mechanical rhythm. Counters are generally large and polygonal, and widths vary by glyph, giving text a lively, hand-engineered spacing texture rather than strict modular uniformity.
Best suited to display settings where the thin outline and faceted geometry can be appreciated—headlines, posters, album/film titles, tech branding, and UI/overlay graphics. It can work for short bursts of text or taglines, but reads most confidently when given generous size and spacing.
The overall tone feels technical and futuristic, like lettering drawn from a blueprint or wireframe interface. Its angular facets and skeletal outlines suggest precision and experimentation more than warmth, lending a sleek, sci‑fi or cyberpunk flavor without becoming decorative in the traditional sense.
This font appears designed to translate sans-serif forms into a planar, constructed outline system, emphasizing clipped corners and geometric continuity. The added parallel strokes suggest an intentional “drawn with a tool” motif, aiming for a modern, engineered look that stands apart from conventional solid-stroke sans forms.
At small sizes the hairline outlines and interior parallel strokes can visually soften or break up, while at larger sizes those construction-like details become a defining feature. The faceting is highly consistent across caps, lowercase, and numerals, giving the set a coherent polygonal voice.