Sans Superellipse Boril 7 is a very light, narrow, low contrast, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: ui labels, headlines, branding, posters, motion graphics, minimal, technical, futuristic, precise, airy, modernity, precision, distinct geometry, interface tone, monoline, rounded corners, rectilinear, geometric, open apertures.
A monoline sans with extremely thin strokes and a tall, streamlined proportion. Curves are built from rounded-rectangle geometry, producing squarish bowls and softly radiused corners rather than circular forms. Terminals tend to be clean and open, with simple, schematic joins and a consistent stroke rhythm that keeps counters generous despite the narrow build. The overall silhouette feels modular and measured, with a crisp baseline and evenly paced spacing in text.
Best suited to display settings where its thin, clean strokes can read crisply—UI labeling, tech-forward branding, editorial headlines, and minimalist posters. It also works well for motion graphics and on-screen titling where the rounded-rect geometry can reinforce an interface or product aesthetic.
The font conveys a quiet, high-tech calm—clinical and modern, with an architectural neatness. Its rounded-rect form language gives it a futuristic, interface-like tone while staying understated and refined.
Likely designed to deliver a sleek, contemporary sans that reads as engineered and modern, using rounded-rect geometry to differentiate it from standard geometric grotesks. The intent appears to prioritize a light, refined texture and a distinctive constructed feel for titles and interface-oriented typography.
Several letters lean toward constructed, sign-like shapes (notably the squared bowls and rounded-corner ‘O’/‘0’ forms), creating a distinctive superellipse identity. The extremely light stroke weight produces a delicate color on the page, favoring clarity and elegance over bold presence.