Sans Superellipse Olmin 6 is a bold, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height, monospaced font visually similar to 'Leftfield' and 'Perfume' by Fenotype, 'Fabrikat Mono' by HVD Fonts, 'Cindie Mono' by Lewis McGuffie Type, 'Interlaken' by ROHH, 'Karben 205 Mono' by Talbot Type, and 'Greeka' by Umka Type (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: ui labels, code samples, tables, instrument panels, packaging, industrial, technical, utilitarian, mechanical, retro, system clarity, robust labeling, technical tone, grid alignment, retro-tech feel, rounded corners, squared curves, compact, blocky, high legibility.
This typeface uses sturdy, uniform strokes and rounded-rectangle curves that keep counters open while maintaining a compact, block-like silhouette. Corners are consistently softened, giving straight stems and horizontal bars a cohesive, engineered feel rather than a geometric-perfect circle construction. Uppercase forms are broad and stable (notably in E, F, T), while round letters like O, Q, and G read as squarish bowls with smooth transitions. Numerals follow the same squared-curve logic, with clear, simple forms and minimal detailing.
Well-suited to interfaces and dashboards, technical documentation, and any layout that benefits from strict alignment such as tables, listings, and forms. It also works effectively for bold labeling—stickers, packaging callouts, and industrial-inspired branding—where a compact, highly legible presence is needed.
The overall tone is pragmatic and machine-minded, evoking labeling, terminals, and equipment markings. Its softened corners add approachability without losing the no-nonsense, utilitarian character. The rhythm feels steady and systematic, lending a retro-tech flavor when set in blocks of text.
The design appears intended to deliver a durable, system-ready voice: strong presence, consistent spacing, and rounded-rectangle forms that remain clear under reduction or in dense blocks. Its geometry suggests a goal of combining functional readability with an intentionally engineered, retro-modern texture.
The design emphasizes consistency across the set: bowls, shoulders, and terminals repeat the same rounded-corner geometry, which helps long strings stay even and orderly. The lowercase has a straightforward, workmanlike build with simple joins and robust punctuation-friendly shapes, supporting dense, information-heavy setting.