Sans Faceted Jijo 7 is a regular weight, very wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui labels, tech branding, headlines, signage, packaging, futuristic, technical, sleek, digital, industrial, modernize, signal technology, add edge, systematize, geometric, rounded corners, angled terminals, square apertures, low contrast.
A geometric sans with squared, chamfered contours that replace most curves with short planar segments. Strokes remain consistently even, producing low-contrast, monoline texture, while corners are softened into rounded-rect forms rather than true circles. Proportions read expansive and horizontally oriented, with open counters and squared apertures that keep letters clean at display sizes. Diagonals and joins are crisp and controlled, giving the design a precise, engineered rhythm across caps, lowercase, and numerals.
Well suited to interface labels, dashboards, and wayfinding where a clean, contemporary sans is needed with extra personality. Its broad proportions and squared geometry also work well for headlines, logotypes, tech and gaming branding, and packaging that aims for a modern, engineered aesthetic.
The overall tone feels futuristic and instrument-like, combining a soft, rounded-rectangle friendliness with sharp, faceted detailing. It suggests sci‑fi interfaces, product tech, and contemporary industrial design—cool, controlled, and modern rather than expressive or calligraphic.
The design appears intended to blend geometric clarity with a faceted, quasi-digital edge—delivering a recognizable sci‑fi/tech signature without sacrificing legibility. By keeping strokes even and simplifying curves into chamfered planes, it creates a consistent, system-like alphabet that feels designed for modern screens and product graphics.
Distinctive faceting shows up most clearly in rounded letters and numerals, where corners are cut into small angles instead of continuous arcs. The lowercase keeps a single-storey construction for key forms, reinforcing a streamlined, utilitarian voice, and the numerals follow the same squared, modular logic for consistent set harmony.