Sans Superellipse Utliv 14 is a bold, wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logos, product ui, packaging, techno, futuristic, industrial, sporty, utilitarian, modernization, tech branding, impact, clarity, geometric unity, squared-round, geometric, modular, rounded corners, stencil-like.
A geometric sans built from squarish, superelliptical bowls and rounded-rectangle counters, with consistently softened corners and mostly even stroke weight. Curves are tight and controlled, giving round letters (C, O, Q) a squared-off silhouette, while diagonals (V, W, X, Y) feel crisp and angular. Apertures are relatively narrow and terminals are clean and blunt, producing a compact, engineered rhythm. The lowercase is straightforward and legible, with single-storey forms and simplified joins; numerals follow the same rounded-rect geometry for a cohesive set.
This font is well suited to display roles where its geometric, squared-round personality can read at a glance—headlines, posters, brand marks, and packaging. It also fits interface titling, dashboards, and product/tech labeling where a clean, engineered look is desired, while remaining readable in short blocks of text at moderate sizes.
The overall tone is modern and synthetic, with a distinctly technical, machine-made character. Its squared-round curves and modular construction suggest sci‑fi interfaces, engineered products, and performance-oriented branding rather than humanist warmth.
The design appears intended to deliver a contemporary geometric voice that merges rounded friendliness with hard-edged precision. By standardizing corner radii and squaring off bowls and counters, it aims for a distinctive, high-tech silhouette that stays consistent across letters, numerals, and punctuation.
The design shows a strong grid logic: wide forms with stable horizontal emphasis, squared counters, and consistent corner radii that unify letters and figures. Some shapes introduce subtle cut-ins and notches (notably in S-like curves and select terminals), adding a slightly stencil/tech flavor without becoming decorative.