Sans Superellipse Arnov 4 is a very light, very wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui labels, tech branding, signage, headlines, posters, futuristic, tech, clean, minimal, geometric, interface design, futurism, geometric clarity, modern branding, rounded corners, squared bowls, open apertures, extended proportions, wireframe feel.
A crisp geometric sans built from straight strokes and rounded-rectangle curves, giving many counters and bowls a squared, superelliptical silhouette. Corners are consistently softened, while horizontals and verticals stay precise and monoline in feel, producing an even, engineered texture. Proportions are notably extended, with generous horizontal spans and compact, tidy curves that keep shapes controlled rather than fully circular. Round letters like C, O, Q, and G read as rounded boxes; diagonals in A, V, W, X, Y, and K are clean and sharply joined, reinforcing the technical construction.
This face is well suited to UI labeling, dashboards, and product interfaces where a clean, geometric voice is desired. It also performs strongly in tech-forward branding, titles, and poster headlines that benefit from its wide stance and rounded-rectangular character. For longer text, it works best in short bursts—subheads, captions, or navigational copy—where its distinctive geometry remains clear.
The overall tone is modern and high-tech, with a cool, system-like neutrality. Its rounded-rectangle geometry evokes interfaces, instrumentation, and sci‑fi design language, balancing friendliness from the softened corners with a sleek, precision-first attitude.
The design intention appears to be a sleek, contemporary sans that translates superellipse construction into a readable, versatile alphabet. By combining softened corners with disciplined straight segments and extended proportions, it targets a futuristic, interface-friendly aesthetic without relying on ornamentation.
The design maintains a consistent radius logic across caps, lowercase, and numerals, which helps the font feel coherent in both display lines and mixed-case settings. Numerals mirror the same squared-rounded construction, and punctuation and terminals appear deliberately pared back, emphasizing clarity and a contemporary, industrial rhythm.