Sans Superellipse Okdim 4 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Geogrotesque Sharp' and 'Geogrotesque Stencil' by Emtype Foundry (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: ui labels, product design, dashboards, signage, packaging, clean, neutral, modern, friendly, technical, clarity, versatility, system design, friendly modernity, rounded corners, uniform strokes, soft geometry, open apertures, compact.
A clean sans with softly squared, superellipse-driven curves and uniformly weighted strokes. Terminals are mostly blunt with subtly rounded corners, giving letters a calm, engineered finish rather than a sharp geometric feel. Proportions read straightforward and workmanlike, with open counters in letters like C, e, and s, and a consistent, steady rhythm across the alphabet. The uppercase is simple and sturdy, while the lowercase keeps clear, compact shapes with minimal modulation and no calligraphic influence.
This font suits interface typography, controls, and labels where clear forms and steady spacing matter. It also works well for brand systems, packaging, and environmental graphics that benefit from a modern, slightly softened industrial look. In editorial or long-form settings it reads clean and unobtrusive, especially for headings, captions, and short paragraphs.
The overall tone is modern and approachable, balancing a utilitarian, UI-friendly clarity with a gentle softness from its rounded geometry. It feels neutral and dependable rather than expressive, with just enough warmth to avoid looking sterile.
The design appears intended to provide a versatile, contemporary sans that remains highly legible while introducing a distinctive rounded-rectangle geometry. It aims to feel systematic and consistent across letters and numerals, making it practical for modern digital and product-oriented typography.
Distinctive superellipse rounding is especially noticeable in bowls and corners, helping the font maintain crisp silhouettes at larger sizes while staying smooth in text. Numerals share the same squared-round logic, producing a coherent, system-like set suited to mixed alphanumeric content.