Sans Superellipse Vemel 6 is a light, very wide, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: branding, technology, headlines, interfaces, posters, futuristic, sleek, technical, streamlined, sporty, modernization, motion, precision, approachability, monoline, rounded, superelliptical, soft corners, open apertures.
A monoline sans with pronounced oblique slant and a superelliptical construction: curves read as rounded-rectangle arcs and terminals finish with softly squared ends. The design favors wide, open bowls and counters, with compact joins and a generally horizontal emphasis. Rounded corners are consistent across straight-to-curve transitions, giving letters and numerals a smooth, engineered outline rather than a purely geometric circle-based feel. Overall spacing appears comfortable and the rhythm is even, with clear differentiation between similarly shaped forms.
Well suited to tech-forward branding, product marks, and display typography where a streamlined, modern silhouette is desired. It can work effectively in UI labels, dashboards, and packaging where rounded-rectangle geometry complements contemporary industrial design. In longer text it will read best at comfortable sizes where the oblique stance and wide set have room to breathe.
The tone is modern and forward-looking, with a polished, aerodynamic feel that suggests technology and motion. Its rounded-rectangle geometry adds a friendly softness while still reading as precise and purposeful, creating a contemporary, slightly sci‑fi voice without becoming decorative.
The font appears designed to merge a clean sans skeleton with superelliptical, rounded-rect geometry and a strong forward slant to convey modernity and motion. Its consistent monoline drawing and softened terminals suggest an intention to feel engineered and approachable at the same time.
Several glyphs lean on simplified, schematic forms (notably in the numerals and the more angular diagonals), reinforcing a constructed, industrial character. The round forms maintain consistent corner radii, and the oblique angle is strong enough to imply speed while remaining controlled and legible.