Sans Faceted Idrav 6 is a very light, very narrow, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: sci‑fi titles, ui labeling, posters, logotypes, packaging, futuristic, technical, minimal, tech aesthetic, geometric reduction, display clarity, system branding, angular, geometric, monoline, faceted, linear.
A monoline, faceted sans with tall, compact proportions and generous internal whitespace. Curves are largely replaced by crisp planar segments and clipped corners, producing octagonal bowls and sharply chamfered joins. Strokes stay consistently thin throughout, with an airy texture and a tight visual footprint; round letters like O and Q read as geometric polygons, while diagonals in A, V, W, and X stay taut and clean. Terminals are predominantly squared or subtly angled, giving the alphabet a precise, drawn-with-a-plotter regularity.
Best suited for display roles where its angular geometry can read crisply at medium to large sizes: sci‑fi or tech titling, interface/wayfinding labels, product marks, and modern poster or packaging systems. It can also work for short taglines or captions when plenty of size and contrast are available to support the very thin strokes.
The overall tone feels futuristic and technical, with an instrument-panel clarity and a minimalist, schematic coolness. Its sharp facets and restrained stroke weight suggest digital interfaces, sci‑fi titling, and engineered branding rather than casual or traditional text settings.
The design appears intended to translate a geometric, faceted construction into a clean sans structure—prioritizing sharp planar rhythm and a controlled, engineered look over warmth or calligraphic nuance. Its consistent chamfers and polygonal bowls aim to evoke precision and modernity in a lightweight, space-efficient form.
The faceting is applied consistently across capitals, lowercase, and figures, creating a cohesive ‘cut-metal’ rhythm in both straight and rounded forms. Spacing appears open enough to preserve legibility despite the thin strokes, while the narrow letterforms keep lines looking economical and tightly set.