Sans Superellipse Vedev 12 is a light, very wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, branding, logotypes, ui display, posters, futuristic, technical, modular, minimal, systematic design, tech aesthetic, geometric clarity, display impact, rounded corners, squared curves, geometric, open counters, extended.
A geometric sans built from rounded-rectangle (superellipse-like) forms, with consistent monoline strokes and generously rounded corners. Curves tend to resolve into straight segments, producing squared bowls and softened right angles rather than circular rounds. Proportions are notably extended horizontally, with wide capitals and lowercases and an overall even, modular rhythm. Counters stay open and clear, and junctions are clean and unembellished; diagonals appear selectively (notably in V/W/X/Y) and are drawn with the same straight, engineered logic. Figures follow the same system, with squared, rounded-rectangle construction and simplified terminals that keep the set visually uniform.
Best suited to display typography where its wide stance and rounded-rect construction can be appreciated—headlines, titles, posters, and brand marks. It also fits interface or product contexts for labels, dashboards, and tech-themed graphics, particularly where a clean, modular aesthetic is desired over traditional text-serif warmth.
The overall tone is sleek and tech-forward, evoking digital interfaces, sci-fi hardware labeling, and engineered signage. Its rounded-rect geometry reads as modern and controlled rather than playful, giving a calm, systematized voice with a subtle retro-futurist edge.
The letterforms suggest an intention to translate a rounded-rectangle geometry into a practical, readable sans for modern digital and industrial contexts. By limiting the shape vocabulary to consistent strokes, straight segments, and unified corner radii, the design aims for a coherent, system-like appearance that stays distinctive in short lines and large sizes.
The design maintains a strong grid discipline: many glyphs feel assembled from repeated parts (straight horizontals/verticals plus consistent corner radii), which helps logos and headlines look cohesive. The extended width makes spacing and line texture feel airy and panoramic, while the simplified shapes keep recognition strong at display sizes.