Sans Faceted Omhe 3 is a regular weight, narrow, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, branding, packaging, album art, angular, quirky, hand-cut, retro, edgy, distinctiveness, display impact, crafted feel, geometric bite, faceted, chiseled, irregular, high-contrast shapes, staccato.
A crisp, faceted sans with straight-sided construction that substitutes curves with small planar breaks, creating a chiseled outline throughout. Strokes stay largely even in thickness, while corners and joins form sharp angles and occasional notched transitions that read like cut paper or carved signage. Proportions are compact and slightly condensed, with open counters and simplified terminals that keep shapes clear at display sizes. The lowercase maintains a straightforward, single-storey feel in several forms, and the figures echo the same angular rhythm, producing a consistent, staccato texture in words and lines.
Well-suited to headlines, posters, and short promotional copy where the angular texture can do visual work. It also fits branding and packaging that want a crafted, cut-out or carved vibe, and it can add personality to album art, event graphics, or title treatments. For long-form reading, it’s best used sparingly as an accent due to the strong faceted rhythm.
The overall tone is energetic and slightly eccentric—more hand-made than clinical—combining a retro poster sensibility with an edgy, geometric bite. Its repeated facets give it a crafted, cut-by-hand character that feels playful but assertive.
The design appears intended to deliver a clean sans structure with a distinctive faceted treatment, evoking hand-cut or carved geometry while preserving straightforward letter construction. Its compact proportions and consistent stroke weight suggest a display-focused aim: strong word shapes, quick recognition, and a memorable texture.
Spacing and sidebearings appear intentionally tight for a compact, poster-friendly set, and the faceting introduces lively micro-variation along what would normally be smooth arcs (notably in round letters and bowls). The result is a distinctive word shape that stays legible while clearly prioritizing character over neutrality.