Sans Faceted Miwa 2 is a bold, narrow, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, album art, game titles, horror branding, gothic, medieval, metal, occult, aggressive, dramatic display, gothic flavor, chiseled geometry, high impact, angular, faceted, chiseled, blackletter-esque, monolinear.
A compact, angular display face built from sharp planar cuts and chamfered corners, replacing curves with faceted joins. Strokes read as largely even-weight with occasional notches and pointed terminals that create a carved, zigzag rhythm along stems and bowls. Counters are small and geometric, and many forms use squared-off interior corners that reinforce a rigid, architectural feel. Spacing appears moderately tight, with irregular silhouettes and subtle width differences across glyphs contributing to a lively, jagged texture in text.
This font performs best as a display face for short lines: posters, titles, packaging, and branding where a sharp, gothic tone is desired. It suits entertainment contexts such as game UI titling, fantasy or horror promotions, and music-related graphics, and it can add a carved, emblematic voice to logos when used at larger sizes.
The overall tone is dark and forceful, echoing blackletter and stone-carved inscriptions while staying clean and sans-like in construction. Its sharp edges and dagger-like terminals project intensity and drama, lending a ritual, medieval, or heavy-music energy. The texture feels confrontational and stylized rather than conversational.
The design appears intended to deliver a modern, faceted take on blackletter-inspired energy—prioritizing striking silhouettes and a chiseled surface texture over smooth readability. Its consistent use of planar cuts and pointed terminals suggests a focus on creating an assertive, emblematic voice that holds up in impactful, high-contrast settings.
Uppercase forms show strong verticality and pronounced corner cuts, while lowercase keeps the same faceted logic with simplified, blocky construction. Numerals follow the same chiseled geometry, maintaining consistent texture when mixed with text. At smaller sizes the tight counters and aggressive notches may merge, so it reads best when given enough size and contrast.