Sans Faceted Omky 1 is a regular weight, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui labels, product branding, signage, wayfinding, headlines, technical, modernist, industrial, futuristic, utilitarian, systematic geometry, technical voice, industrial styling, clear signage, faceted, octagonal, chamfered, geometric, crisp.
A clean, geometric sans with chamfered corners and subtly faceted bowls that replace fully round curves with short planar segments. Strokes stay even throughout, producing a steady, engineered color, while terminals are predominantly flat with occasional angled cuts. Proportions are straightforward and functional, with open counters and clear interior space; rounded letters like C, G, O, and Q read as octagonal forms, and the lowercase maintains a simple, single‑storey construction for letters such as a and g. Numerals echo the same faceted logic, giving the set a consistent, modular rhythm across text and titling sizes.
Well suited to interfaces, dashboards, and product labeling where a crisp, technical voice helps reinforce precision. It also works for signage and wayfinding thanks to its open counters and straightforward forms, and it can add a controlled futuristic accent in headlines and brand systems without relying on ornament.
The faceted geometry gives the font a technical, industrial tone—precise and slightly futuristic without becoming decorative. It suggests engineered surfaces, machined parts, and signage systems, conveying clarity and control rather than warmth or softness.
The design appears aimed at translating a neutral geometric sans into a more engineered voice by introducing systematic corner chamfers and faceted curves. The goal seems to be maintaining legibility and restraint while adding a distinctive, industrial signature through consistent planar shaping.
The chamfers are consistent enough to feel like a deliberate system, creating small highlights at corners and a distinctive silhouette in round forms. In paragraph settings, the even stroke and open shapes keep the texture calm, while the faceting adds a subtle mechanical edge that remains noticeable in headings.