Sans Faceted Orwa 2 is a regular weight, narrow, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, titles, headlines, branding, packaging, gothic, medieval, heraldic, dramatic, arcane, display impact, gothic revival, modernized blackletter, carved aesthetic, brand voice, angular, faceted, chamfered, monoline, blackletter-leaning.
A faceted, angular sans with chamfered corners and straight-edged construction that replaces curves with planar cuts. Strokes read as largely uniform in thickness, with crisp terminals and frequent pointed joins, creating a tight, vertical rhythm. Counters are compact and geometric, and many forms show clipped shoulders and diagonally notched corners (notably in rounded letters and numerals), producing a consistent, cut-metal silhouette. The lowercase follows the same architectural logic as the caps, keeping a controlled x-height and narrow overall set while maintaining clear, high-contrast letter silhouettes through negative space rather than stroke modulation.
Best suited to display settings such as posters, game or film titles, event headlines, album artwork, and brand marks that want a stylized gothic edge without dense ornament. It can also work for packaging and labels where a carved, emblem-like presence is desirable; extended body copy is less ideal due to the tight spacing and angular detailing.
The overall tone feels gothic and ceremonial, evoking carved signage, heraldry, and fantasy or historical display contexts. Its sharp facets and disciplined verticality give it a stern, weapon-forged energy—dramatic, arcane, and authoritative rather than casual or friendly.
The font appears designed to deliver a contemporary, faceted take on gothic lettering—prioritizing sharp geometry, compact proportions, and a carved/forged aesthetic. Its consistent chamfers and simplified construction suggest an intention to be impactful and legible at headline sizes while retaining a distinctly medieval-leaning character.
The design favors recognizable, simplified structures over traditional blackletter complexity, making it read more like a modernized, geometric interpretation of gothic forms. The numerals share the same beveled logic, helping headings and short UI-style labels keep a consistent, emblematic voice.