Sans Superellipse Dywe 9 is a regular weight, wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui design, app branding, product design, wayfinding, packaging, modern, techy, clean, friendly, precise, systematic design, clarity, modern branding, friendly tech, rounded corners, squared curves, geometric, monoline, open counters.
A monoline sans with a superelliptical construction: curves resolve into rounded-rectangle shapes with consistent corner radii and smooth, even stroke weight. Proportions run slightly wide, with generous interior space and open counters that keep forms clear at text sizes. Terminals are clean and largely orthogonal, producing crisp joins on diagonals and straight segments while maintaining soft rounding on bowls and shoulders. Figures and uppercase share the same controlled geometry, giving the design a systematic, engineered rhythm.
Well-suited to user interfaces, dashboards, and digital product typography where clarity and a modern tone are essential. The wide, open forms also work well for branding, packaging, and wayfinding systems that benefit from a friendly geometric presence. In display settings it delivers a recognizable, tech-forward look without becoming overly decorative.
The overall tone is contemporary and technological, pairing precision with approachability. Rounded corners soften the geometry, creating a friendly, product-oriented feel rather than a cold industrial one. The wide stance and open shapes add an airy, confident voice suited to modern interface aesthetics.
The font appears intended as a contemporary workhorse sans that blends geometric rigor with softened edges. Its superelliptical shapes and consistent rounding suggest a design goal of creating a coherent, system-like visual language that remains readable and approachable across sizes.
The design’s signature is the consistent rounded-rectangle logic across letters and numerals, which creates a distinctive silhouette in words and a cohesive texture in paragraphs. Spacing appears comfortable and even, supporting continuous reading while still looking clearly “designed” in headlines. The numeral set reads cleanly and maintains the same softened, squared-off curvature seen in the letterforms.