Sans Superellipse Emmes 7 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, italic, tall x-height font visually similar to 'Yoshida Sans' and 'Yoshida Soft' by TypeUnion (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: ui design, wayfinding, branding, product design, headlines, modern, technical, sleek, friendly, sporty, modernize, add motion, soften geometry, improve clarity, rounded, oblique, geometric, monoline, open apertures.
A rounded, superelliptical sans with a consistent monoline stroke and an overall oblique slant. Forms are built from soft corners and rounded-rectangle geometry, producing smooth curves in C/O and squared-off rounding in counters and terminals. Uppercase shapes are compact and aerodynamic, with simplified joins and minimal stroke modulation; lowercase maintains a large x-height with clear, open apertures in letters like e, c, and s. Numerals follow the same rounded, forward-leaning logic, and spacing feels even and contemporary with a steady rhythm across mixed-case text.
This font suits interface typography, dashboards, and product labeling where a clean, rounded geometry reads as modern and efficient. The slanted stance and sturdy shapes also work well for branding, packaging, and headline settings that want a sense of speed and precision while staying friendly and legible.
The tone is contemporary and streamlined, balancing a technical, engineered feel with approachable roundness. The oblique posture adds motion and urgency, giving the face a sporty, forward-driving character without becoming aggressive.
The design appears aimed at a modern oblique sans that combines superelliptical construction with practical readability. Its softened geometry and steady stroke weight suggest an intention to feel engineered yet approachable, performing reliably across short display lines and functional text.
Round terminals and softened corners are a defining motif throughout, creating a cohesive “capsule” silhouette in both straight strokes and curves. Diagonals and joins are kept clean and restrained, supporting legibility in longer lines while preserving a distinctly geometric personality.