Sans Superellipse Haniv 1 is a regular weight, wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui design, product branding, wayfinding, packaging, headlines, futuristic, tech, clean, friendly, geometric, ui clarity, modern branding, geometric consistency, tech tone, rounded, superelliptic, modular, sturdy, soft-cornered.
A geometric sans built from rounded-rectangle and superellipse-like contours, with consistent stroke thickness and soft, squared-off terminals. Counters tend toward rounded squares, giving bowls (as in O, D, P, a, e) a compact, engineered feel rather than purely circular. Curved joins stay smooth and uniform, while diagonals (A, V, W, X) read crisp and stable against the broader, boxier curves. Overall spacing and proportions feel open and generous, supporting clear silhouettes at display and text sizes.
It’s well suited to interface typography, dashboards, and app or device UI where round-corner geometry pairs naturally with modern components. The sturdy shapes also work well for signage and wayfinding, and for branding or packaging that aims for a contemporary, tech-adjacent voice. In editorial contexts, it performs best in headings, subheads, and short text blocks where its distinctive squircle rhythm can be appreciated.
The tone is modern and slightly sci‑fi, combining a technical, system-like discipline with approachable rounded corners. It suggests contemporary product interfaces, digital signage, and streamlined branding where a clean but distinctive geometry is desired.
The design appears intended to translate the logic of rounded rectangles into a full alphabet, yielding a consistent, contemporary texture that feels both engineered and friendly. Its emphasis on uniform strokes, softened corners, and controlled geometry suggests a focus on clarity and recognizability across print and screen contexts.
Several forms lean into a squircle logic: the C and G feel more like softened rectangular arcs, and the numerals share the same rounded, modular construction for a cohesive alphanumeric texture. The lowercase maintains a simple, contemporary structure with a single-storey a and g, reinforcing a utilitarian, UI-forward character.