Sans Faceted Orgo 11 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui labels, tech branding, posters, headlines, signage, techno, futuristic, industrial, modular, precise, modernize, systematize, digitize, industrialize, differentiate, angular, geometric, faceted, squared, monolinear.
A geometric, monolinear sans built from straight strokes and crisp corners, with curves largely replaced by chamfered, faceted joins. Bowls and counters are squarish and open, terminals are clean and flat, and many letters show clipped inner corners that create a mechanical, constructed feel. Proportions are fairly even and upright, with slightly condensed moments in some forms and wider footprints in others, producing a subtly uneven but deliberate rhythm. Numerals and capitals follow the same hard-edged geometry, keeping the texture consistent across the set.
Well-suited to technology branding, product labels, UI/UX headings, packaging accents, and poster or event typography where a geometric, engineered aesthetic is desired. It can also work for short blocks of text at larger sizes, where the faceted construction reads as a purposeful stylistic motif rather than visual noise.
The overall tone is technical and forward-looking, with a clean industrial character that suggests interfaces, machinery, and digital systems. Its sharp facets and square counters read as engineered rather than handwritten, giving it a controlled, utilitarian voice with a sci‑fi edge.
The design appears intended to reinterpret a neutral sans through planar, straight-edged construction—reducing curves into facets to create a modern, machine-made look while preserving familiar skeletons for readability. It prioritizes crisp geometry and consistent stroke treatment to produce a distinctive, system-like texture in both caps and lowercase.
In text, the distinctive faceting becomes a consistent surface pattern, especially in rounded letters (like O, C, G, S) and in diagonals (A, V, W, Y), where the straight-segment construction is most apparent. The punctuation and spacing shown in the sample maintain a tidy, grid-like cadence that supports display use while remaining legible at moderate sizes.