Sans Superellipse Emmaw 15 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Mazot' by Hurufatfont (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: ui text, app design, wayfinding, dashboards, product branding, modern, clean, technical, efficient, neutral, modernization, clarity, system cohesion, tech tone, softening, oblique, monoline, rounded, superelliptic, open apertures.
A monoline sans with a consistent right-leaning oblique angle and smooth, rounded-corner construction. Curves read as superelliptic/rounded-rectangle forms, giving bowls and counters a softly squared geometry rather than purely circular shapes. Strokes stay even with minimal modulation, terminals are clean and largely straight-cut, and joins are crisp, producing a tidy, engineered texture. Spacing and rhythm feel orderly, with open counters and clear interior shapes that keep the text color even in continuous setting.
This font works well for UI and product contexts where a clean, modern oblique sans is needed, such as app interfaces, dashboards, and labeling. The rounded superelliptic curves and even stroke weight also suit contemporary brand systems, short headlines, and signage-style communication that benefits from a smooth, technical tone.
The overall tone is contemporary and matter-of-fact, with a subtle sense of speed from the oblique slant. Rounded geometry adds approachability while the disciplined, monoline build keeps it precise and utilitarian. It feels more modern-tech than expressive, suited to interfaces and streamlined branding.
The design appears intended to merge a practical sans skeleton with softened, superelliptic curvature, creating a modern oblique that stays neutral and highly consistent. It aims for clarity and cohesion across uppercase, lowercase, and numerals while adding a distinctive rounded-rect geometry that differentiates it from purely geometric italics.
Uppercase forms are compact and stable, while the lowercase shows clear, simple constructions with minimal calligraphic influence. Numerals match the same rounded, even-weight logic and maintain a straightforward, functional presence. The slant is consistent across letters and figures, helping maintain coherence between display and text use.