Sans Superellipse Onret 7 is a regular weight, wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui text, app design, product branding, signage, dashboards, techy, clean, friendly, futuristic, precise, modernize, systematize, soften edges, tech emphasis, ui clarity, rounded corners, squared curves, geometric, open apertures, compact counters.
A geometric sans built from squared-off, superellipse-like curves and straight segments, giving letters a rounded-rectangle skeleton rather than purely circular bowls. Strokes are even and steady, with softly radiused terminals and consistent corner rounding throughout. Proportions feel spacious and horizontally confident, while counters stay relatively compact, creating a solid, contemporary texture in words. Uppercase forms are simplified and modular (notably the squared bowls in B/D/P/R and the flat-ended E/F), and the lowercase maintains a straightforward, engineered rhythm with single-storey a and g and a clean, minimal r.
Well-suited to user interfaces, dashboards, and product experiences where a clean, systematic sans is needed with a warmer edge. Its sturdy, rounded-rect forms also work well for tech-forward branding, packaging, and signage, especially at medium-to-large sizes where the geometric character is most evident.
The overall tone is modern and technology-leaning, with a friendly softness coming from the rounded corners. It reads as efficient and systematic—more interface and product design than editorial—while still feeling approachable rather than stark. The squared curves give it a mildly futuristic, digital flavor without becoming novelty-driven.
The design appears intended to provide a contemporary geometric sans with a distinctive rounded-rectangle construction, balancing strict modularity with softened corners for approachability. It aims for consistent, engineered letterforms that feel at home in digital environments while remaining readable and versatile across branding and interface contexts.
Distinctive superellipse construction shows strongly in C/G/S and the numerals, which share the same rounded-rect geometry and uniform stroke logic. Apertures are generally open and clear, and the shapes avoid calligraphic modulation, keeping emphasis on consistency and legibility at display and UI sizes.