Sans Superellipse Askat 7 is a very light, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Obvia Wide' by Typefolio (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: ui labels, product design, dashboards, wayfinding, branding, minimal, clinical, contemporary, tech, calm, modern neutrality, interface clarity, geometric system, softened tech, monoline, rounded, soft corners, geometric, open counters.
A monoline sans with rounded-rectangle construction and consistently softened corners throughout. Curves are drawn as smooth superelliptic arcs, giving bowls and counters a squarish roundness rather than true circles. Terminals are clean and blunt, joins are tidy, and the overall rhythm is airy with generous internal space; caps feel tall and neatly proportioned, while lowercase forms stay simple and open. Numerals follow the same rounded-rect geometry, with a flat-topped, angular-leaning “2” and a streamlined “1,” reinforcing the systematized, modular look.
Works well for UI text, navigation, and product surfaces where a crisp, modern sans with softened geometry is desired. It also suits contemporary branding and packaging that aims for a clean, technical voice, and can perform in signage or wayfinding where simple shapes and open counters help maintain legibility.
The tone is restrained and modern, reading as precise and quietly technical rather than expressive. Its soft corners keep it approachable, but the overall impression remains clean, measured, and interface-like—well suited to contemporary digital aesthetics.
Likely designed to blend geometric discipline with friendliness by replacing circular rounds with superellipse-like curves and rounding all corners. The intention appears to be a controlled, contemporary sans that feels at home in digital interfaces and modern identity systems while staying visually light and unobtrusive.
Several forms emphasize open apertures and minimal detailing (notably in letters like “c,” “e,” and “s”), which supports clarity at display sizes. The superelliptic construction creates a distinctive ‘rounded-square’ signature that stays consistent across capitals, lowercase, and figures.