Sans Superellipse Arluj 2 is a very light, wide, monoline, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, ui labels, tech branding, motion graphics, posters, futuristic, technical, sleek, aerospace, minimal, streamlined modernity, system consistency, tech aesthetic, speed cue, geometric clarity, rounded corners, obround forms, open apertures, high legibility, streamlined.
A very thin, monoline italic sans with a strong forward slant and broad, airy proportions. Curves resolve into rounded-rectangle and superellipse-like bowls, producing squared-off counters with softened corners in letters such as O, Q, D, and 0. Terminals are clean and mostly cut on an angle, with occasional extended horizontals and underscored-like strokes in forms such as J, S, and y that emphasize the italic motion. The overall rhythm is spacious with consistent stroke weight, open apertures, and a mechanical, drawing-like precision.
Best suited to large sizes where the thin strokes and geometric detailing can stay crisp—such as tech-forward branding, product lockups, UI/UX labels, dashboards, and titling. It also works well in motion graphics and posters where an aerodynamic, contemporary voice is desired. For dense body text, it will benefit from generous size, line spacing, and strong contrast.
The design reads as futuristic and engineered, with a quiet sense of speed from the italic angle and streamlined corners. Its ultra-clean geometry feels technical and contemporary, suggesting interfaces, instruments, and modern transportation aesthetics rather than warm or decorative settings.
The font appears designed to combine minimal monoline construction with superelliptic geometry to evoke a streamlined, high-tech tone. The oblique angle and rounded-rectangular bowls aim to communicate motion and precision while maintaining a consistent, systematized character across letters and numerals.
The superelliptic construction creates distinctive, slightly squared bowls and counters that remain consistent across capitals, lowercase, and numerals. The numerals mirror the same rounded-rectangle logic (notably 0, 2, 3, 6, 8, 9), reinforcing a cohesive, system-like texture in longer text. Extremely thin strokes and the oblique stance make spacing and background contrast especially important for comfortable reading.