Sans Faceted Ilra 4 is a light, narrow, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui labels, signage, posters, branding, packaging, technical, futuristic, minimal, industrial, precise, space saving, modernization, geometric voice, technical clarity, angular, condensed, geometric, squared, architectural.
A condensed, geometric sans with a consistent monoline stroke and a strong rectilinear construction. Curves are largely replaced by squared corners and short planar turns, giving counters and bowls a boxy, faceted feel. Terminals are clean and mostly square, with tight apertures and compact internal spaces that emphasize a vertical, engineered rhythm. Uppercase forms are tall and narrow, while the lowercase maintains a straightforward, single‑storey structure and simple joins; numerals follow the same squarish, modular logic.
It suits interface labels, wayfinding, and technical or product-forward branding where compact width and crisp geometry help maintain a tidy layout. The distinctive squared forms also work well for posters, packaging, and headlines that need a modern, engineered voice while staying clean and legible.
The overall tone is technical and forward-looking, with an industrial, instrument-like clarity. Its faceted geometry reads as engineered and systematic rather than humanist, suggesting precision, utility, and a subtle sci‑fi flavor without becoming decorative.
This appears designed to deliver a compact, modern sans optimized around modular, faceted shapes that replace traditional curves. The intent seems to be a distinctive geometric voice that remains restrained and practical, balancing a futuristic edge with straightforward readability.
The design relies on consistent corner behavior and a restrained palette of straight strokes, producing a uniform texture in text. The condensed proportions and tight apertures make the face feel efficient and space-conscious, and the squared counters give it a distinct “machined” signature even at display sizes.