Sans Superellipse Ardum 2 is a very light, wide, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui labels, tech branding, headlines, posters, wayfinding, futuristic, minimal, clinical, techy, precise, modernization, geometric system, digital tone, clean branding, display clarity, rounded corners, geometric, open counters, airy, thin stroke.
A very thin, monoline sans built from rounded-rectangle and superellipse logic, pairing straight stems with softly radiused corners. Curves resolve into squared-off bowls and terminals, creating a crisp, modular rhythm and generous interior space. Proportions feel expanded with wide letterforms and open apertures, while details like the angled leg on R and the diagonal tail on Q add just enough differentiation to keep the system readable. Numerals and lowercase follow the same rounded-rect geometry, maintaining consistent stroke weight and a clean, even texture in text.
Best suited to display and large-size applications such as interface labels, product branding, and modern headline systems where its thin monoline strokes and geometric rounding read clearly. It also works well for posters and signage that aim for a futuristic, minimal aesthetic, especially in short bursts of text.
The overall tone is sleek and contemporary, with a distinctly digital, interface-forward character. Its thin lines and rounded geometry give it a cool, precise presence that reads as modern and engineered rather than expressive or traditional.
This design appears intended to deliver a streamlined, system-like sans with superelliptical rounded forms—optimized for a clean, contemporary look and a distinctive geometric signature. The emphasis is on consistency, clarity of structure, and a modern tech-facing voice rather than warmth or calligraphic nuance.
The font’s identity comes from the tension between strict linear construction and softened corners: sharp diagonals (A, V, W, X, Z) sit alongside boxy rounds (C, O, D, G, 0) without breaking stylistic cohesion. Counters remain large and open at display sizes, and the consistent rounding helps unify mixed-case settings.