Sans Superellipse Dysy 11 is a light, very wide, medium contrast, upright, tall x-height font.
Keywords: ui, app design, tech branding, product labels, signage, modern, technical, clean, futuristic, friendly, systematic design, ui clarity, modern branding, geometric identity, soft precision, rounded, geometric, superelliptic, monoline, open.
A geometric sans built from superelliptic curves and rounded-rectangle construction, with softly squared counters and terminals throughout. Strokes are largely monoline with smooth, continuous joins and a controlled, engineered feel rather than calligraphic modulation. Uppercase forms are broad and open, with squared-off bowls in letters like B, D, P, and R, while C and G keep generous apertures. The lowercase echoes the same rounded geometry, pairing a large, readable x-height with simple, almost modular shapes; dots and punctuation-like elements appear circular and clean. Numerals follow the same system, with rounded corners and flat-ish horizontals that keep figures tidy and legible.
This font suits digital interfaces, dashboards, and product ecosystems where clarity and a contemporary voice are needed. Its wide, open forms also make it effective for headings, wayfinding-style graphics, and brand systems that lean modern and minimal. In running text, it maintains a steady texture with clear letterforms and consistent geometry.
The overall tone is contemporary and tech-forward, balancing a precise, systematized geometry with approachable softness from the rounded corners. It reads as efficient and modern, but not harsh—more friendly-interface than industrial signage. The wide stance and open apertures give it an airy, confident presence in headlines and UI-style settings.
The letterforms suggest an intention to translate superellipse/rounded-rectangle geometry into a practical sans for modern communication. The design prioritizes consistency, legibility, and a distinctive soft-tech silhouette that feels at home in UI and product-oriented contexts.
The design maintains a consistent radius logic across straight-to-curve transitions, giving text a cohesive rhythm in both all-caps and mixed-case passages. Several shapes favor flattened curves and squared counters, reinforcing a “rounded-rect” identity that stays recognizable even at smaller sizes.