Sans Faceted Idluz 11 is a very light, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: display, posters, headlines, branding, packaging, technical, geometric, futuristic, architectural, minimal, geometric styling, sci-fi tone, technical clarity, distinctive display, monoline, faceted, chamfered, angular, octagonal.
A monoline sans with consistently faceted, chamfered corners that replace curves with short planar segments. Strokes are very thin and evenly weighted, producing a clean, wireframe-like silhouette with crisp joins and a slightly mechanical rhythm. Proportions are fairly compact with straightforward construction, and counters often read as octagonal or cut-corner forms (notably in round letters and numerals). Spacing appears measured and regular, with simple terminals and minimal modulation across the set.
Best suited for display contexts where the faceted geometry can be appreciated—headlines, posters, branding marks, packaging, and event or tech-themed graphics. It can also work for short interface labels or titles when ample size and contrast are available, but it is less optimized for dense body text.
The overall tone feels technical and engineered, like lettering drafted from polygons rather than penned by hand. Its sharp facets and airy strokes suggest a futuristic, schematic sensibility that reads cool, precise, and intentionally stylized rather than neutral.
The design appears intended to translate a geometric, polygon-based idea into an everyday sans skeleton—keeping familiar letterforms while expressing them through faceted corners and consistent monoline strokes for a distinctive, modern signature.
The faceting is applied consistently across uppercase, lowercase, and figures, giving the design a cohesive polygonal theme. At smaller sizes the thin strokes and corner detail may soften, while at larger sizes the cut-corner geometry becomes a defining texture.