Sans Faceted Ihvu 12 is a very light, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui labels, tech branding, posters, signage, packaging, technical, futuristic, precise, minimal, geometric modularity, interface clarity, sci-fi tone, system consistency, monoline, octagonal, angular, geometric, wireframe.
A monolinear geometric sans with faceted, chamfered construction that turns bowls and curves into crisp, planar segments. Corners are consistently clipped, producing octagonal counters in letters like O and numerals like 0, while straights remain clean and evenly weighted. Proportions feel engineered and open, with generous interior space and a measured, slightly modular rhythm across capitals, lowercase, and figures. Diagonals are sharp and tidy, and joins are handled with controlled angles rather than rounding, giving the set a coherent, technical silhouette.
Best suited to display-oriented typography where its faceted geometry is a feature: UI or product labeling, tech and industrial branding, event or exhibition graphics, and high-contrast signage. It also works well for short headlines, wordmarks, and packaging where a clean, engineered voice is desired.
The faceted outlines and hairline strokes create a forward-looking, schematic tone—cool, controlled, and intentionally clinical. It reads as digital and engineered, evoking instrumentation, sci‑fi interfaces, and precision labeling rather than expressive handwriting or traditional editorial warmth.
The design appears aimed at translating a geometric sans into a faceted, polygonal language—retaining clarity while replacing curves with consistent chamfers to suggest manufactured precision and a contemporary, digital aesthetic.
Distinctive identity comes from the repeated chamfer motif: even traditionally curved forms (C, G, S, 2, 3, 6, 9) resolve into small angled planes, which makes the texture feel like a continuous wireframe system. The thin stroke demands adequate size and contrast in use, where the angular counters and clipped terminals remain legible and consistent.