Sans Superellipse Boril 1 is a very light, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui labels, tech branding, posters, headlines, wayfinding, futuristic, technical, minimal, clean, precise, geometric system, interface tone, modern display, constructed forms, rounded, monoline, geometric, superelliptic, modular.
A monolinear sans built from squared-off curves and superellipse-like bowls, combining rounded-rectangle counters with straight, crisp terminals. Corners are consistently softened, while verticals and horizontals stay rigid and evenly weighted, creating a controlled, modular rhythm. Several forms are intentionally simplified—open apertures, compact bowls, and flat-ended strokes—giving the alphabet a constructed, diagrammatic feel and clear figure/ground in the rounded counters.
Best suited to display and short-to-medium settings where its superelliptic geometry can read clearly—UI headers, app or device labeling, technical diagrams, and tech-oriented branding. It can also work for contemporary posters and signage-style titling, especially where a sleek, engineered aesthetic is desired.
The overall tone is futuristic and technical, with a cool, engineered cleanliness. Its rounded-rect geometry evokes interfaces, product labeling, and sci‑fi instrumentation more than humanist warmth, reading as precise and deliberate.
The design appears intended to translate rounded-rectangle geometry into a coherent alphabet: a minimal, constructed sans that prioritizes consistency of corner radius, stroke logic, and modular proportions for a distinctly modern, interface-ready voice.
Numerals and capitals lean into the same rounded-rectangle language, with squarish 0/8-style shapes and a consistent corner radius that ties the set together. The design’s economy of detail and frequent open forms keep it airy, but also make it feel intentionally stylized rather than purely neutral.