Sans Superellipse Bimey 7 is a very light, normal width, monoline, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: tech branding, ui labels, headlines, posters, motion graphics, futuristic, technical, sleek, aerodynamic, digital, sci‑fi styling, technical clarity, speed impression, geometric systematization, angular, rounded corners, geometric, oblique, wireframe.
A sharply oblique, geometric sans with a consistent single-stroke construction and pronounced slant. Letterforms are built from straight segments and rounded-rectangle turns, producing squared counters and softened corners rather than true circles. Terminals are clean and open, with frequent cut-ins and chamfer-like joins that emphasize a drawn-from-lines, schematic feel. Proportions are compact and slightly condensed in rhythm, while diagonals in A, V, W, X, and Y are crisp and taut; numerals follow the same angular, rounded-corner logic for a unified set.
Best suited to short-to-medium display settings where its slanted, geometric character can read clearly: tech and gaming branding, interface-style labels, sci‑fi titles, posters, and motion graphics. It can also work for captions or callouts when generous tracking and size are used to preserve the airy strokes.
The overall tone is futuristic and engineered, evoking instrumentation, sci‑fi interfaces, and precision hardware markings. Its lean angle and minimal stroke presence give it speed and lightness, while the squared curves keep it firmly in a technical, digital register.
The design appears intended to deliver a fast, contemporary “tech” voice by combining a consistent monoline stroke with rounded-rectangle geometry and an aggressive oblique stance. The letter construction prioritizes clean, modular forms and a cohesive sci‑fi silhouette over traditional text softness.
Round letters like O and Q read as squarish superelliptic forms with inset-like corners, and the G/C family shows open apertures that keep shapes from closing up. The lowercase is similarly angular and streamlined, with simple dots on i/j and a single-storey a that matches the font’s geometric system.