Sans Superellipse Emmor 9 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font visually similar to 'DIN Mittel EF' by Elsner+Flake and 'NotaBene' by Wiescher Design (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: user interfaces, product branding, wayfinding, packaging, data display, modern, clean, technical, efficient, neutral, contemporary ui, streamlined motion, geometric clarity, friendly neutrality, oblique, monoline, rounded, superelliptic, open apertures.
A slanted sans with monoline strokes and a superelliptic construction that keeps curves smooth and corners softly squared rather than fully circular. Proportions are steady and compact, with rounded-rectangle bowls in letters like O/C and similarly shaped counters across the lowercase. Terminals are clean and uncluttered, and many joins favor gently curved transitions, giving the forms a streamlined, engineered feel. Numerals follow the same oblique rhythm, with simple, open shapes and consistent stroke behavior.
Well-suited to contemporary interface typography, dashboards, and product surfaces where a clean oblique sans can add energy without becoming decorative. It can also work for short-form branding, packaging callouts, and signage/wayfinding where the rounded geometry stays clear at a glance.
The overall tone is modern and efficient—more utilitarian than expressive—while the rounded superellipse geometry adds a mild friendliness. Its slant reads as brisk and forward-moving, suggesting speed, motion, and contemporary UI polish rather than calligraphic warmth.
The design appears intended to blend neutrality with a subtle geometric signature: a pragmatic sans skeleton paired with superelliptic curves and a consistent oblique stance. The goal seems to be an efficient, contemporary text and display voice that feels technical yet approachable.
Round forms show a consistent squared-off curvature that reads like rounded rectangles, which helps keep texture even across lines. The italic angle is pronounced enough to create momentum in text, while remaining controlled and orderly for continuous reading.