Sans Superellipse Delog 6 is a light, wide, monoline, italic, normal x-height, monospaced font.
Keywords: code ui, terminal text, data tables, captions, labels, technical, friendly, retro, informal, utilitarian, clarity, system feel, soften geometry, uniform rhythm, interface use, rounded, soft corners, oblique, geometric, square-ish counters.
A clean monoline design with rounded-rectangle construction and soft, superellipse-like curves. Strokes stay even and lightly weighted, with a consistent oblique slant across capitals, lowercase, and figures. Many bowls and counters read squarish rather than circular, and terminals are smoothly rounded, producing a tidy, engineered feel. Proportions are open and slightly extended, with clear separation between stems and curves and stable, consistent widths typical of fixed spacing.
Well-suited to interface typography where fixed spacing and consistent rhythm are beneficial, such as code-like displays, dashboards, tables, and technical labeling. It also works for compact captions, packaging callouts, and short editorial side text when a soft, engineered aesthetic is desired.
The overall tone is approachable and technical at the same time—like labeling from instruments, terminals, or DIY electronics. Its rounded corners soften the geometry, giving it a friendly, slightly retro-futurist voice rather than a strict industrial one.
The design appears intended to combine the clarity and regularity of fixed-width construction with a modern rounded-geometry flavor. By keeping strokes uniform and corners softened, it aims to stay readable and orderly while feeling less rigid than typical machine-oriented faces.
Distinctive letterform cues include a single-storey "a" and "g", a simple angled "k", and a straightforward "1" with an angled top. The numerals and uppercase shapes keep the same rounded-rect logic, which helps text feel uniform and schematic in longer passages.