Sans Faceted Idbeb 5 is a very light, wide, monoline, upright, tall x-height, monospaced font.
Keywords: ui labels, code, data tables, posters, tech branding, techy, minimal, futuristic, precise, clinical, systematic, modernization, technical voice, geometric styling, distinctive identity, geometric, angular, faceted, wireframe, modular.
A spare geometric sans built from uniform strokes with an airy, open color. Curves are frequently replaced by shallow angles and segmented arcs, producing a faceted, almost wireframe construction in bowls and rounds. Proportions are narrow-to-moderate per character but evenly allotted, with consistent sidebearings that create a steady, gridlike rhythm in text. Terminals are clean and mostly squared-off, with occasional pointed joins in letters like A, V, W, and Y; counters stay large and uncluttered for clarity at display sizes.
Works best where a clean, grid-consistent rhythm is useful: interface labels, technical diagrams, dashboards, and tabular or code-like settings. At larger sizes it becomes a strong stylistic choice for futuristic headlines, packaging, and technology-oriented branding where the faceted construction can be appreciated.
The overall tone is cool and technical, combining minimalism with a slightly sci‑fi, schematic feel. Its angular rounding and disciplined spacing read as deliberate and engineered rather than friendly or expressive, lending a contemporary, systemized voice.
The design appears intended to merge a utilitarian monospaced skeleton with a distinctive faceted geometry, offering a modern alternative to standard rounded sans forms. By keeping strokes thin and counters open while introducing angular segmentation, it aims to feel both functional and visually signature.
Distinctive faceting appears in rounded characters (C, G, O, Q, e, g) where arcs break into planar segments, while diagonals and joins stay crisp and taut. The numeral set follows the same logic, keeping forms open and lightly drawn, and the punctuation and dots appear small and restrained relative to the generous internal space of the letters.