Sans Superellipse Remap 1 is a light, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui, product design, tech branding, signage, data display, modern, tech, friendly, calm, clinical, clarity, neutrality, systematic, ui-readability, modernization, geometric, rounded corners, soft terminals, clean, minimalist.
A geometric sans built from squared curves and superellipse-like rounds, with consistent stroke weight and softened corners throughout. Curves tend to resolve into flat-ish terminals, creating a “rounded rectangle” rhythm across bowls and counters. Proportions are tidy and slightly compact in feel, with open apertures and smooth, even spacing that keeps paragraphs airy and legible. The caps are simple and constructed, while the lowercase maintains the same modular logic, producing a cohesive, modern texture in text.
Well-suited to UI and product design where a clean, modern voice is needed—navigation, dashboards, settings screens, and app typography. It should also work well for tech branding, packaging with a contemporary feel, and editorial sidebars or captions where a crisp, unobtrusive sans is preferred. The numeral set’s rounded, geometric construction makes it a good fit for data displays and labels.
This typeface feels clean, calm, and quietly futuristic. Its rounded-rectangle geometry gives it a friendly, approachable tone while still reading as technical and systematic. Overall it suggests contemporary interface design and precise, engineered clarity rather than expressive or historical styling.
The design appears intended to deliver a neutral, contemporary sans with a distinctive rounded-rect geometry that stays consistent across letters and numerals. It prioritizes clarity and uniformity, aiming for a smooth, controlled texture in both headings and running text while adding a subtle futuristic character through its softened square curves.
Many round letters (such as O/Q and the bowls in b/d/p) read as rounded rectangles rather than true circles, giving the face its characteristic geometry. The lowercase shows single-storey forms (notably a and g), reinforcing the modern, simplified construction and keeping the texture consistent with the caps.