Sans Superellipse Remor 8 is a light, narrow, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui labels, editorial subheads, posters, branding, packaging, clean, modern, efficient, neutral, technical, space saving, modern clarity, geometric consistency, systematic tone, condensed, minimal, crisp, geometric, open.
This typeface is a condensed sans with smooth, rounded-rectangle geometry and consistently low stroke contrast. Curves in letters like C, G, O, and Q read as superelliptical rather than purely circular, while straight strokes stay clean and even. Terminals are mostly straight or softly rounded, with simple, compact joins that keep counters open despite the tight width. The lowercase shows straightforward forms with a two-storey “a,” a single-storey “g,” and a short, contained “t,” producing an orderly, economical texture in text. Numerals are similarly streamlined and slender, aligning well with the overall vertical rhythm.
It works well where horizontal space is limited—such as UI labels, navigation, and compact layouts—while still looking polished in headlines and subheads. The clean geometry also suits modern branding systems, packaging, and posters that benefit from a crisp, structured typographic presence.
The overall tone is contemporary and pragmatic, leaning toward a quiet, utilitarian sophistication. Its restrained detailing and compact proportions give it a focused, information-forward feel, suitable for designs that want clarity without calling attention to the letterforms.
The design appears intended to deliver a modern condensed voice with a superelliptical, rounded-rect character—balancing friendliness from softened curves with a disciplined, space-saving footprint for contemporary layout needs.
In running text the spacing and condensed proportions create a tall, even color that stays readable at display sizes, while very small sizes may feel denser due to the narrow set width. Round letters maintain a consistent squareness-to-roundness balance, reinforcing a cohesive geometric voice across capitals, lowercase, and figures.