Sans Faceted Ihki 2 is a very light, wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: display, headlines, ui labels, branding, posters, futuristic, technical, geometric, sci‑fi, minimal, sci‑fi styling, tech branding, geometric system, interface voice, modular aesthetic, faceted, angular, monoline, octagonal, crisp.
A faceted geometric sans built from straight strokes and clipped corners, replacing most curves with short planar segments that create octagonal counters and chamfered terminals. Strokes are monoline and finely drawn, with clean right angles and consistent join behavior that keeps the texture even across mixed cases. Proportions lean horizontally open, and the shapes maintain a measured, modular rhythm; round letters read as polygonal forms while diagonals stay sharp and disciplined. Numerals follow the same faceted logic, with squared bowls and angled cuts that match the capitals.
Best suited to display roles where the faceted construction can be appreciated—headlines, titles, posters, logotypes, and packaging with a tech-forward brief. It can also work for short UI labels, captions, or interface motifs when a geometric, schematic feel is desired, though the very thin strokes may call for sufficient size and contrast in practical settings.
The overall tone feels futuristic and instrument-like, suggesting interface labeling, technical diagrams, and sci‑fi worldbuilding. Its crisp facets and airy line weight convey precision and cool detachment rather than warmth or nostalgia.
The design appears intended to translate classic sans forms into a polygonal, chamfered vocabulary, giving familiar letter structures a hard-edged, engineered character. By keeping stroke weight consistent and corners systematically clipped, it aims for a cohesive techno aesthetic that remains readable while clearly departing from fully rounded geometry.
In text, the chamfered geometry creates a distinctive sparkle at corners and joints, especially where horizontals meet verticals. The design keeps a consistent mechanical voice across uppercase, lowercase, and figures, making the set feel intentionally systematized rather than hand-drawn.