Sans Superellipse Ablah 2 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Sans Beam' by Stawix (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: ui design, product design, wayfinding, signage, dashboards, modern, tech, clean, friendly, geometric, clarity, modernization, systematization, approachability, superelliptical, rounded corners, monoline, open apertures, large counters.
A geometric sans with a superelliptical construction: rounds tend toward rounded-rectangle bowls, and curves connect with smoothly filleted corners rather than sharp joins. Strokes are essentially monoline, with crisp terminals and a consistent, engineered rhythm across caps, lowercase, and numerals. Counters are generous and many apertures stay open (notably in forms like c, e, s), supporting clarity. Overall proportions read steady and contemporary, with straightforward diagonals and compact, neatly contained curves.
Well suited to interface typography, product branding, dashboards, and other screen-forward applications where even stroke weight and open forms aid quick scanning. It can also serve for signage and wayfinding, and works cleanly in short headlines and labels where the rounded-rectangle geometry becomes part of the visual identity.
The tone is modern and technical, pairing a clean, system-like neutrality with a mild friendliness from the softened corners. It feels efficient and contemporary—more product and interface than editorial—while staying approachable rather than cold.
Likely intended as a contemporary, geometric workhorse that balances neutral readability with a distinctive superellipse skeleton. The design appears aimed at producing consistent texture and a crisp, modern voice across mixed-case text and numerals in practical settings.
The caps lean geometric and slightly squared in their curved letters, while lowercase forms keep a tidy, utilitarian feel that maintains consistent color in text. Numerals follow the same rounded-rect geometry, giving UI-style uniformity to mixed alphanumeric settings.