Sans Superellipse Verul 7 is a light, very wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui labels, app design, tech branding, signage, packaging, futuristic, tech, modular, clean, precision, modernize, systematize, interface-forward, brandable, rounded, geometric, squared, open, spacious.
A geometric sans built from rounded-rectangle logic, with softly squared counters and corners that stay consistently radiused throughout. Strokes are even and unmodulated, producing a clean outline rhythm and a slightly “drawn with a single tube” feel. Letterforms tend toward extended, low-contrast silhouettes with generous internal space and open apertures; many curves resolve into flat-ish terminals rather than fully circular bowls, reinforcing the superelliptical construction. The overall spacing feels airy and measured, with a crisp, engineered regularity across caps, lowercase, and numerals.
It performs well in modern UI and product contexts where clarity and a technological aesthetic are desired—navigation, dashboards, device screens, and system labeling. The distinctive rounded-square forms also suit tech-forward branding, logotypes, and contemporary packaging, especially at medium to large sizes where the geometry can read cleanly.
The font projects a sleek, futuristic tone—more interface and product-design than editorial. Its rounded-square geometry reads as technical and contemporary, with a friendly softness from the corner radius that tempers the otherwise digital, modular impression.
The design appears intended to translate superelliptical industrial forms into a practical text-and-display sans, prioritizing consistency, cleanliness, and a recognizable geometric voice. It aims to look modern and engineered while remaining approachable through rounded corners and open interior shapes.
Several glyphs emphasize horizontal continuity (notably in E/F/T and the numerals), while rounded corners prevent the design from feeling harsh. The figures follow the same rounded-rectangle language, creating a cohesive alphanumeric set suited to systematic layouts.