Sans Superellipse Lonir 5 is a regular weight, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui, signage, branding, headlines, packaging, techy, clean, futuristic, friendly, minimal, modernize, soften geometry, increase clarity, system aesthetic, tech branding, rounded corners, soft geometry, rectangular curves, open apertures, low contrast.
A geometric sans with monoline strokes and generously rounded corners, built from superellipse-like curves and rounded-rectangle bowls. Vertical stems are straight and even, while terminals are consistently softened, giving the forms a tidy, engineered look. Counters tend toward squarish rounds (notably in O/0 and similar shapes), and many joins are smooth and slightly condensed into narrow radii, maintaining a uniform rhythm. The lowercase shows simple, single-storey constructions (a, g) and clear, open apertures, contributing to legibility while keeping the overall geometry strict.
Well suited to user interfaces, dashboards, and wayfinding where a clean, rounded geometric voice supports clarity. It also works for contemporary branding, product labeling, and short headlines that benefit from a polished, techno-friendly aesthetic. In longer text, it remains readable thanks to open shapes and consistent stroke behavior, especially at comfortable sizes.
The overall tone feels modern and technical, with a friendly softness coming from the rounded corners and calm, even stroke. It reads as futuristic without being aggressive—more “interface” than “industrial”—and maintains a measured, orderly cadence in text.
The design appears intended to merge geometric rigor with softened edges: a utilitarian, system-like sans that avoids sharpness while retaining a distinctive rounded-rectangular skeleton. It aims for contemporary clarity and an approachable technical character across both display and text settings.
Distinctive letterforms include a rounded-rectangle O and similarly structured numerals, plus a clean, schematic approach to diagonals in V/W and the angular joins of K/R. The spacing and proportions keep glyphs airy and uncluttered, making the design feel precise and systematic even at larger display sizes.