Sans Superellipse Embuw 2 is a regular weight, wide, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui design, app branding, tech logos, packaging, signage, futuristic, technical, sleek, sporty, clean, speed emphasis, modernization, ui clarity, tech tone, geometric consistency, rounded corners, oblique slant, squared bowls, geometric, monoline.
A slanted, monoline sans built from rounded-rectangle geometry, with softly squared counters and corners throughout. Curves tend to resolve into superelliptical bowls rather than perfect circles, giving letters like O, C, D, and Q a crisp, machined feel. Strokes keep a steady thickness with minimal modulation, while terminals are clean and rounded, supporting a smooth, continuous rhythm. The italic angle is consistent across caps, lowercase, and figures, and the overall proportions read open and slightly extended, helping forms stay clear despite the strong slant.
Well suited to user interfaces, dashboards, and product experiences where a clean italic sans can add momentum without sacrificing clarity. It can also work for tech-forward branding, automotive or sports-adjacent graphics, packaging, and modern signage where rounded-square geometry supports a sleek, contemporary look.
The overall tone feels contemporary and engineered—streamlined rather than expressive—evoking interfaces, transportation, and performance branding. Its rounded-square construction adds a friendly softness to an otherwise precise, modern voice.
The design appears intended to merge geometric clarity with a softened, rounded-square silhouette, delivering a modern italic that feels fast and precise. Its consistent stroke weight and superelliptical construction suggest a focus on contemporary digital and industrial contexts where legibility and a streamlined aesthetic are both priorities.
Capitals show simplified, geometric construction (notably the squared-off curves in B, D, and G), while lowercase maintains the same rounded-corner logic for a cohesive texture in text. Numerals follow the same oblique, superelliptical approach, with smooth, continuous shapes that look particularly at home in UI and data-forward settings.