Sans Superellipse Oslep 10 is a bold, normal width, low contrast, upright, tall x-height font visually similar to 'FF Good' and 'FF Good Headline' by FontFont (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, signage, ui labels, modern, confident, friendly, utilitarian, clean, clarity, approachability, impact, modernity, consistency, rounded, blocky, compact, geometric, robust.
A sturdy geometric sans with softened corners and superellipse-like bowls that read as rounded rectangles rather than perfect circles. Strokes are uniformly heavy with minimal modulation, producing a compact, high-impact texture. Proportions are straightforward and contemporary: broad shoulders, closed apertures in places, and generous counters that keep the weight from feeling cramped. Terminals are largely straight or gently rounded, and curves connect with smooth, mechanical transitions for a consistent, engineered rhythm.
Works best in headlines, short blocks of copy, and brand marks where its dense weight and rounded geometry create instant presence. It’s also well-suited to UI labels, navigation, and product/packaging applications that benefit from a firm, friendly sans with consistent spacing and sturdy forms.
The overall tone is modern and confident, with an approachable friendliness coming from the rounded geometry. It feels straightforward and no-nonsense, suited to contemporary branding and interfaces where clarity and solidity matter. The heavy, soft-cornered shapes suggest a pragmatic, tech-adjacent voice rather than an expressive or calligraphic one.
Likely designed to deliver a contemporary geometric voice with softened corners—combining the punch of a heavy sans with the approachability of rounded superellipse forms. The emphasis appears to be on uniformity, consistency, and strong readability for modern display and interface contexts.
Caps have a strong, sign-like presence, while the lowercase maintains a compact, efficient silhouette that stays legible at display and UI sizes. Numerals share the same rounded-rectilinear logic, giving mixed alphanumeric strings a cohesive, uniform color on the page.