Sans Superellipse Hanoh 7 is a bold, narrow, monoline, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, ui display, packaging, techy, retro-futurist, industrial, sci-fi, geometric styling, interface feel, display impact, modernization, rounded corners, squared rounds, stencil-like, modular, geometric.
A compact geometric sans with squared, superellipse-derived curves and consistently rounded corners. Strokes are heavy and largely uniform, with terminals cut flat and corners softened rather than fully circular. Many forms are built from vertical stems and rounded-rectangle bowls, producing a modular, engineered rhythm; counters tend to be tight, and joins are clean and unflared. The lowercase is compact with a relatively low x-height feel, while ascenders and descenders are short-to-moderate, giving text a dense, blocky texture.
Best suited to display settings where its compact, modular shapes can read as intentional design: headlines, posters, logotypes, product/packaging, and UI titles or interface labels. In longer passages the dense counters and strong geometric rhythm may feel heavy, but it performs well for short statements and punchy hierarchy.
The overall tone reads technical and retro-futuristic, evoking digital interfaces and industrial labeling. Its rounded-rect geometry feels friendly enough to avoid harshness, yet the compact proportions keep it assertive and utilitarian.
The design appears intended to translate rounded-rectangle geometry into a sturdy, contemporary sans for attention-grabbing typography, balancing industrial clarity with softened corners for approachability.
Distinctive superellipse construction shows strongly in round letters and numerals, where curves behave more like softened rectangles than true circles. Several glyphs incorporate simplified, almost stencil-like shaping that increases graphic character and can add a display-forward edge at larger sizes.