Sans Superellipse Aldov 1 is a very light, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui labels, headlines, posters, tech branding, wayfinding, techy, clinical, futuristic, precise, minimal, geometric clarity, systematic styling, modern utility, interface tone, rounded-rect, geometric, wireframe, square-ish, modular.
A crisp, geometric sans built from rounded-rectangle strokes and softly squared curves. The line weight is consistently thin and even, with smooth corner radii and frequent right-angle turns that create a “drawn with a single pen” feel. Counters tend toward squarish forms (notably in O/Q/0/8), and diagonals appear sparingly but cleanly in letters like A, K, V, W, X, and Y. Overall proportions are tidy and engineered, with clear baseline alignment, open apertures, and a slightly modular construction that keeps shapes coherent across caps, lowercase, and numerals.
Best suited to short-to-medium text where its thin strokes and geometric detailing can be appreciated—UI labels, dashboards, packaging callouts, and modern editorial headlines. It also works well in tech-forward branding, environmental graphics, and wayfinding systems that benefit from a clean, engineered rhythm.
The tone is modern and instrument-like—cool, controlled, and slightly sci‑fi. Its rounded-square geometry reads as technical and systematic, suggesting interfaces, schematics, and contemporary product design rather than warmth or tradition.
The design appears intended to translate superellipse-inspired rounded-square forms into a practical, readable sans, prioritizing consistency of curvature and an efficient, technical texture. It aims for a contemporary voice that feels systematic and modern while keeping letterforms simple and recognizable.
Distinctive rounded-corner rectangles show up repeatedly in key glyphs, giving the design a strong internal logic. Numerals follow the same geometry, with a particularly boxed look for 0, 6, 8, and 9, supporting a consistent alphanumeric voice in mixed settings.