Sans Faceted Hukes 2 is a very light, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, branding, posters, ui display, wayfinding, tech, architectural, clinical, futuristic, precise, geometric system, tech styling, modern display, constructed forms, visual identity, angular, faceted, octagonal, geometric, modular.
A geometric, monoline sans built from straight strokes and clipped corners, replacing curves with crisp facets. Bowls and rounds resolve into octagonal forms, giving letters like C, G, O, Q, and S a planar, segmented rhythm. Strokes are consistently thin with open apertures and generous internal space, while capitals are relatively tall and linear in silhouette. The lowercase maintains the same angular logic, with simplified joins and a clean, mechanical flow through words; figures match the system with similarly chamfered contours.
Best suited to display settings where its angular facets can read clearly—headlines, logotypes, posters, packaging, and tech-forward branding. It can also work for interface titles, dashboards, or wayfinding when set at comfortable sizes and with adequate spacing, leveraging its open shapes and consistent geometric system.
The faceted construction reads as technical and engineered, suggesting digital interfaces, schematics, and contemporary industrial design. Its sharp geometry feels cool and controlled rather than expressive, with a subtle sci‑fi edge driven by the repeated chamfers and polygonal counters.
The design appears intended to translate a simple geometric system into an alphabet, using chamfered corners to unify all glyphs and evoke a constructed, modern aesthetic. By keeping stroke weight light and forms open, it aims to stay clean and legible while foregrounding the distinctive polygonal styling.
Diagonal strokes (V, W, X, Y and related lowercase) are clean and taut, and the repeated corner cuts create a consistent "machined" motif across the set. At smaller sizes the thin stroke and frequent angles may emphasize sparkle and segmentation, while at larger sizes the polygonal forms become a defining graphic texture.