Sans Superellipse Arbif 1 is a very light, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Digital Sans Now' by Elsner+Flake (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: ui labels, app interfaces, wayfinding, tech branding, headlines, minimalist, futuristic, clinical, technical, sleek, systematic design, modern neutrality, tech aesthetic, ui clarity, rounded, geometric, squared-off, modular, clean.
A thin, monoline sans built from rounded-rectangle and superellipse geometry. Curves are broadly radiused and corners are softly squared, giving round letters a “squircle” feel (notably in bowls and counters). Strokes remain even with open apertures and simplified constructions, while verticals and horizontals dominate the rhythm. Numerals and caps keep a tidy, engineered consistency, with distinctive flat terminals and rounded joins that emphasize a modular, UI-like structure.
Well suited to interface labels, dashboards, product UI, and other settings where a clean, geometric voice supports a contemporary tech aesthetic. It can also work for headings, posters, and branding systems that benefit from squared-round letterforms and a controlled, minimalist texture.
The overall tone is modern and restrained, leaning toward a futuristic, instrument-panel cleanliness. Its squared curves and steady line weight read as precise and neutral, with a subtle sci‑fi flavor that feels systematic rather than playful.
The font appears designed to translate a superellipse/rounded-rectangle construction into a legible sans, aiming for a cohesive, modern system of shapes. Its consistent rounding and simplified details suggest an intention to feel engineered and screen-friendly, with a distinctive squarish softness that sets it apart from purely circular geometrics.
The design favors clear silhouettes over traditional typographic nuance: bowls are boxy-rounded, crossbars are minimal, and many forms feel derived from the same rounded-rect module. In text, the consistent stroke and generous rounding create a calm, orderly texture that can look especially crisp at display sizes.