Sans Faceted Hema 6 is a bold, very narrow, low contrast, upright, tall x-height font visually similar to 'Bronex Pro' by Alit Design, 'Jonathan Andrea' by Ergibi Studio, 'Film P3' by Fontsphere, 'Mekanik' by ITC, and 'Metallic Sky' by SoftMaker (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: posters, headlines, branding, packaging, gaming, industrial, futuristic, gothic, noir, authoritative, display impact, space saving, geometric edge, modern-tech, angular, faceted, condensed, monoline, high-waisted.
A sharply faceted, condensed sans built from straight strokes and clipped corners, using planar cuts where curves would normally appear. The forms are tall and tightly set, with mostly monoline construction and strong vertical emphasis. Counters are narrow and often polygonal, and terminals end in clean, chiseled angles that create a crisp, mechanical rhythm. Capitals are uniformly narrow and rigid, while the lowercase mirrors that structure with similarly narrow bowls and compact apertures; numerals follow the same chamfered logic for a consistent texture across mixed text.
Well-suited to display typography where a sharp, mechanical voice is desired—posters, event titles, album/film graphics, and brand marks that lean industrial or futuristic. It can also work for packaging and gaming/tech interfaces when used in short bursts, where its dense, chiseled texture becomes a defining stylistic asset.
The overall tone feels industrial and architectural, with a slightly gothic edge from the tall proportions and pointed joins. Its faceted geometry reads as modern-tech and poster-like, conveying tension, urgency, and a controlled, engineered personality rather than warmth or neutrality.
The font appears intended to translate a constructed, engineered aesthetic into a readable condensed sans, replacing curves with consistent planar cuts to produce a distinctive, hard-edged texture. Its tall proportions and disciplined vertical rhythm suggest a goal of maximizing impact and presence in tight horizontal spaces.
The design’s repeated chamfers create a distinctive “cut metal” texture, especially visible in rounded letters and in the pointed descenders/joins of forms like V/W/Y. The narrow interior spaces and dense vertical rhythm make it visually striking at display sizes, while extended text takes on a dark, compact color.